GASoline71
Mr. Nice Guy
Gary, it's good to see that there are some folks who appreciate the older chainsaws. Most of the time they line up to bash them, comparing them with brand new saws. This is one of the few places where the older equipment is treated like that. Most 4X4 and pick-up groups brand bash pretty bad, but it is only the new vehicles getting bashed. When somebody comes up with something old, people go out of their way to help with finding parts or giving advice on repairs. Old trucks are venerated as pieces of history and often lovingly restored.
I'm geussing that, in part, it cames down to the history of the '50s and '60s chainsaws and the men who used them. They cleared out the bulk of the old growth timber. I'm thinking that there is more than abit of jealousy as there isn't much left and only a very few get to fall it. Who among us wouldn't give anything to fall an old growth tree, with a big chainsaw, of any make or age?
Ray
Yeah Ray... I love the big old monsters that were used in the glory days of PNW logging. I have some old Homelites that I wish could talk... they came out of the woods on the West slope of the Cascsade Mountains near Mount Rainier... the stories those saws would have. It's cool to also find out the history behind some of the saws from that era.
Old, heavy, loud, and slow is waaaayyyy cooler than the new stuff.
Gary