PA Plumber
Addicted to ArboristSite
Another vote for the Echo 346 CS. Great dependability, very light, and new under $200.00 on FleaBay, including shipping.
I'm looking to buy a good little saw just for clearing brush/small trees 4 inches or less in diameter. I used to have a little green poulan but it just wasn't much, couldn't keep the darned thing running. Looking for something with a 10 inch bar and lightweight.
how 'bout 339xp??
I've already got a Johnny 2054 with a 16 inch bar and a poulan pro 336. I'm wanting something lightweight and very short. I'll be walking my timber and thinning out all of the small trash trees, just cutting them and leaving them lay. Also occassional multi-flora rose bushes and other brushy stuff. I've been using my johnny but it does get a little heavy after 3 or 4 hours of walking around and bending down to cut 'em. Like I said earlier, most stuff will be under 4 inches with the majority of it prolly inch and a half to two inch hickory.
I had the 346 and the 401 kills it in everyway...except that its like 20 dollars more...
I'll throw a vote in for an 011 AVT.
Light, reasonably priced (about $120 on ebay), and better power to weight ratio then the other saws mentioned.
I don't limb all that much as I am usually working wood in the 18 to 36 inch range, but I do limb occasionally. So my vote is something on the small side. My older 026 and 5100 run sharp square and cut fine, but after a while the tendon in my left bicep (inside elbow) get tired when limbing because you are holding the saw out so much. (Or clearing brush for a couple of hours with a saw.)
So my vote is for something less than 11 lbs. power head max. A lb less than a 5100 doesn't sound like much, but for limbing I would find it welcome.
With a sharp chain a small saw will limb quite fast.
Id say that tiredness is becouse of incorrect technique.... when limbing the saw is resting againts log 90% time, if done properly...
Technique can always be improved, but I constantly try to make all my tasks as physically easy as possible. 90 percent might be true if one was walking down trees on level ground rather than on the sides of a building or very large trees that require alot of moving about. My saws cut fast and the actual cut is a small fraction of the total time moving about getting into position. With large trees, limbing requires lifting the saw to above waist height over and over, which after a while takes it's toll. Often the branch has to be cut shorter before totally limbed which means cutting in the air. That means I had to lift the saw that high. Many times.
So I am not really disagreeing, just throwing in it depends on the environment, size of tree and such for your pecentage. And the real issue with my arm is swinging a spikemaul back in the days I was a gandy dancer spiking on crews by hand all day for months on end. Talk about abuse of the body.
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