I never swung an axe, owned a chainsaw, or lit a fire until I was 48. I split most things with the hydraulic splitter, but lately have been wanting to split some of the easier stuff by hand.
The Truper was my first purchase, I think $26 at the time from Lowe's. It was blunt and took a lot of filing to make it work. I bought the Fiskars next, when they became widely available, but in truth, the Truper fits me better. I'm always getting the Fiskars stuck, where the Truper wiggles right out. I like the Truper well enough that I bought another one this week. It's changed slightly.
The Iron City Maul is my real gem, $4 at a farm sale. It will bust anything, if you can swing it long enough. From left to right, Truper/Iron City/X27:
As for the rest of the collection: the Estwing is my limbing axe. The Kobalt hatchet stays on the splitter. I want to like the Fiskars axes, but they just don't do anything that the Truper won't. The Chopper 1 I bought at a retirement sale...I actually like it a lot, but the Truper does the same thing without springs to break. The 6# maul is worthless, though I had high hopes for it, but $6 at a farm sale so I'm not out much. The Michigan axe is OK...wish I had something like that in 5# to try.
All in all, I use the Truper the most. It will split tough stuff (white oak), with some persistence, and it sends the easy stuff (red oak, hackberry, cherry) flying. I'd recommend it to anyone who thought the Fiskars was too much money. Likewise, I really like the the Estwing for limbing and the Kobalt hatchet. I've tried several other hatchets (Collins, Estwing, Fiskars), but liked the Kobalt well enough to buy a second one when I lost the first.
Thanks for reading.