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Can the pole sections be individually removed to just use the extension needed, lightening the tool when possible?
Can the pole sections be individually removed to just use the extension needed, lightening the tool when possible?
Not too many tools out there that can be used for more than one purpose. I find the Hayauchi is heavy in the tree and is best kept on the ground.
Steve
Silky is a con. Don't get taken.
I have two retired Hayauchi pole saws. Silky is a rip-off, in general, and the Hayauchi is one of the bigger rips out there. If you are a production worker and you work smart, but don't have time to baby your equipment, forget this saw, seriously. It will bend if you look at it wrong, just about. When that happens, you will no longer be able to collapse the sections. Even if you don't bend them, after a few weeks, the telescoping sections won't do so, smoothly, due to normal conditions on tree gigs. The hanger for this unit is a laughable joke, as well. It goes for around $30, delivered, and it appears to be chromed plastic over tin. Want to trust your skin to that? No way. Silky is a con. Don't get taken.
I have two retired Hayauchi pole saws. Silky is a rip-off, in general, and the Hayauchi is one of the bigger rips out there. If you are a production worker and you work smart, but don't have time to baby your equipment, forget this saw, seriously. It will bend if you look at it wrong, just about. When that happens, you will no longer be able to collapse the sections. Even if you don't bend them, after a few weeks, the telescoping sections won't do so, smoothly, due to normal conditions on tree gigs. The hanger for this unit is a laughable joke, as well. It goes for around $30, delivered, and it appears to be chromed plastic over tin. Want to trust your skin to that? No way. Silky is a con. Don't get taken.
couldn't disagree more.... silky's are money makers. I have two silky telescoping pole saws and use them every day, one stays on the bucket truck and extends to twelve feet, It fits nice in the scabbard I have for the hydraulic pole saw. The other one is the 21 footer and is for the ground guys, makes pulling hangers easy peasy. I have had the 21 footer for about two years now. most of the tabs have broken off but the spring buttons still work.... really no big deal. Once it breaks all the way I will immediately buy a brand new one with a big fat smile on my face.
As far as taking sections out, don't bother, it is a pain to put them back together and if you dent up the butt of it you may not be able to put them back together. I have never used the $30 hook. One of my climbers does occasionally like to climb with one and he hangs it from a sling off of his saddle.
Take care of your tools and they take care of you.
Last time I looked, Stihl made 'em, not Silky.are 200t's a scam too, or you just prefer a 192?
its a ground saw for sure.
I could never figure out why a climber would ever need a pole saw in a tree?
What do I recommend? The old tried and true, fiberglass sectionals that snap together. There's a reason why they're found in 90% of all tree kits out there: They work, and work hard. Sure, you'll fight to use three or four snapped together if you don't know that you need to add the sections while you lean the growing pole upright against the target tree, but once you get the hang of it, everything's fine. I still have six and eight foot sections that I've had for over ten years. The odds are almost zip that you'll find Hayauchis lasting that long. In the end, it's whatever works for you. If some of you have great results with Silky products, good on you. Keep using 'em. For me, they're an overpriced rip-off. Now that I think of it, those Hayauchi buttons are a poor design, too. It's sort of an imprecise way to collapse the pole, as I see it.