fool skip
ArboristSite Operative
I know of quite a few 35-40 year old Stihl chainsaws still doing the job. I don't know of any Echos of that era still working. Maybe I don't get out enough.
The Echo in some ways superior to the Euro saws. I would put durability and build quality up there with anything. In fact if I were comparing the ms362, 562xp and the Echo cs590/cs600, I would say the Echo is the best saw of the bunch, epically when it comes to simplicity and serviceability. I have worked on and owned all three. I would like to know wow many who have posted their opinions in this thread can say that? I bet not too many.I don't think Echo will ever bring or hold the resale value of the European saws regardless of how well they are made or are perceived to be amongst consumers. While I think that the Echo line of products is an excellent value, I don't think that they are peers to Husky and Stihl when comparing their Pro-series lines.
Far as resale goes yes Stihls will bring more at resale time but cost $800 new and will bring $400 after a few years, a CS590 can be bought for $350 to $400 new and will bring $200 at trade time. Which one cost more to own. Steve
I like how the echo farm/ranch saw is always lumped in the same group as the stihl/husky pro saws.
Beyond that you are comparing saws without auto-tune options, inferior anti-vibe systems, inferior air filters, and lower grade materials to saws with all of those options, it isn't exactly apples to apples here.
We can argue until we are blue in the face about this, but very few people will ever agree that Echo saws are equals to Husky and Stihl Pro saws. Get back to me when you see the majority of tree services, utility companies, professional arborists, wildland fire fighters, and first responders using Echo saws. I doubt either of us will still be on this forum when that day comes lol.
Yup.. If it has the right name on it, it must be good.[emoji23]More than most for sure. A lot of the critics have never had a saw apart and most likely don't know how to run one right. Steve
Andy, I like how you point out one of the older saws in the Stihl lineup (461) to take a lick at, again apples to oranges here. I also like that your bias against the best saws in the business is blatantly obvious. At the end of the day I really couldn't care less about which saws you like or that you think myself and others here are blinded by labels, lol, that's a pretty strong/arrogant assumption. You take saws apart and fix them, good for you, you are still just one man with an opinion, a strong and biased one at that but hey, you're entitled to it. I'll let industries of professionals, saws decades old still in service, and my research and money do the talking for my purchases, you do you. Could Echo earn this same reputation 10+ years from now, certainly, and they are well on the road to doing so, but they aren't there yet.
More than most for sure. A lot of the critics have never had a saw apart and most likely don't know how to run one right. Steve