MCW
Somebody's talking crap here & it ain't the tree!
ROFL
I'm a "large European chick" enthusiast!
CSW
Fat girls need lovin' too...
ROFL
I'm a "large European chick" enthusiast!
CSW
Fat girls need lovin' too...
What about those Cox and O&R model airplane engined saws of the 60's? 21cc I think.
CSW
That thing would probably outcut that skill i had.lol
2 cu. in. = 32.7 ccI'd like to find a chainsaw to race in the 1-2 cube class.
Any suggestions?
It shoud be 2 cubes or under. Stock that is!
.
2 cu. in. = 32.7 cc
I'd like to find one to race too, Jack. My little 1977 Homelite XL (26cc) just doesn't cut it. I didn't think I'd get though that 8x8 hardwood the first time let alone 2 cuts.
Is a nice little saw to cut limbs with though. http://www.acresinternet.com/cscc.n...ce0f71a23c6c52da88256c26004cc301?OpenDocument
Don't know which one but i'm pretty sure i owned one. Had a skill years ago and it wouldn't go through butter. Little bitty saw and was useless. Couldn't even limb with it.
Wow... a useful post from spacemule! I might grab one of those to throw in my snowmobile this year, hard to find a decent saw that is light and doesn't take up much space.
The smallest cc recent chainsaw is the Zenoah G2000T chainsaw at18.3 cc. Not sold in the USA, so far as I can find out, but advertised in Singapore and several other Asian nations. It is advertised at 2.2 kg. If anyone has one, I would like to hear your assessment of it.
A creative answer, but not valid in the context of the original post.
The question was, "who made the smallest cc chainsaw"... which implies that the saw must have an internal combustion engine with a measurable displacement.
2 cu. in. = 32.7 cc
I'd like to find one to race too, Jack. My little 1977 Homelite XL (26cc) just doesn't cut it. I didn't think I'd get though that 8x8 hardwood the first time let alone 2 cuts.
Is a nice little saw to cut limbs with though. http://www.acresinternet.com/cscc.n...ce0f71a23c6c52da88256c26004cc301?OpenDocument
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