Fiskars 7859
After reading all the praise regarding the Fiskars axes I drove 40 miles through freezing rain last night, to the nearest Lowes to get one. By all appearances, the 7853 and 7854 are obsolete numbers in the supply chain or for some odd reason Fiskars labels the models for Lowes differently. The axes and mauls at Lowes look exactly like the ones shown on the Fiskars website and they carry the same warranty. I also made note that Fiskars has changed model numbers at least twice since the introduction of these tools so my assumption seems reasonable to me. They had a very nice, well stocked display for the Fiskars axes, and the prices are good also. I bought the 7859 which is the largest they had to offer and seems to match the decription of the 7854, 28 3/8" and 4.5# for $35 + tax. Internet price is around $50. Now for the review: Between last night and this afternoon I split about 4 face cord of various hardwoods with the Fiskars and the other mauls I own(except the infamous Chopper 1) which include a Collins Rapid Maul w/4.5# head and 36" fiberglass handle, 6# maul with 36" fiberglass handle, and an 8# maul with 36" wood handle. I split an assortment of ash, hickory, beech, maple, elm, and locust. With straight grained woods like the hickory and ash, the Fiskars worked as well as any of them, even in some roughly 40" ash I had, just whittle around the outside. If however you want to split maple, elm, or locust, forget this thing, it just bounces off most of the time, although I did stick the head a couple of times. Sometimes swinging harder seems logical but it didn`t help. For most of the tougher wood the Rapid Maul and the 6#er were pretty equal with the 6 having a slight edge in what it will split, but the Rapid Maul is less tiring to use. There were several pieces that I was unable to split with anything but the 8# maul or a saw. I always worked my way up on the tougher ones with the different mauls to establish the threshold at which they would break. The Fiskars maul has a nice feel and it seems it would make a pretty nice axe for wedging with the larger head. Even with the flared head, it will cut dirty bark off just like an axe, and the short handle is nice if you carry your wedging axe on your back in a pouch, it doesn`t stick up too much and the center of balance is all low so it would stay put. The short handle is a handicap for splitting. Seems to me that the increased head speed from a longer handle would be a benefit, maybe helping it split tougher rounds, and you do need a higher chopping block to work this maul which makes more work to get the rounds up for the split. All in all it`s a nice tool and I like using it, but if I`m going out in the bush where I don`t want to carry more than one maul for splitting, it`s staying home. Sorry about the long windedness, just wanted to give a thorough review. Russ