Came across something in a 10 year old thread in which I found wisdom and a clue to where we may be going.
Just for fun and discussion.
The author made two solid points
1 The lifespan of consumer grade saws is in excess of the work ethic of the consumer. I.e. The vast majority of consumers don’t work their saws very many hours and aren’t willing to work enough hours to actually wear them out. That probably has not improved substantially in the last 10 years. Just saying.
He went on to say:
2. When properly maintained, consumer grade saws far outlast the consumer grade work ethic. I personally believe this to be true as I put 90 hours of cutting time - not work hours but actual cutting time - on a Poulan 3314 and pulled the muffler to inspect the p/c. Bottom line is the p/c looked clean and no visible wear. Compression was strong on my gage. No indication of wear after 90 hours of running with careful maintenance. I think it fair to say 90 hours exceeds majority of consumer needs.
So I think he’s right. Consumer gas saws can easily outlast consumer needs with proper maintenance.
Yet they are often deemed to be junk. So it must be improper maintenance or improper set up or improperly running of the saw keeping them from outlasting their owners expectations. (Lean carb settings, dull chains, poor storage, running out of bar oil or bad fuel mixes....)
Maybe this a case where the consumer is insufficiently invested in the longevity of his/her saw? Again it’s unlikely this has improved in the last 10 years.
So, what’s the right answer and where will the industry go? Build better quality saws and urge people to spend more to buy high quality gas saws even though they don’t need them? Assume people will want to be more educated and less “lazy” and will do maintenance and and take time to learn proper techniques? YouTube is full of counter examples to that notion
Will the industry find a way to build simpler to maintain cheap consumer gas saws with self adjusting carbs that run rich but still satisfy the EPA?
Is a useful 4 stroke chainsaw possible at the consumer price range? Do these factors mean a fover shift to progressively cheaper and better plug in and battery powered saws for the consumer market?
Just for fun and discussion.
The author made two solid points
1 The lifespan of consumer grade saws is in excess of the work ethic of the consumer. I.e. The vast majority of consumers don’t work their saws very many hours and aren’t willing to work enough hours to actually wear them out. That probably has not improved substantially in the last 10 years. Just saying.
He went on to say:
2. When properly maintained, consumer grade saws far outlast the consumer grade work ethic. I personally believe this to be true as I put 90 hours of cutting time - not work hours but actual cutting time - on a Poulan 3314 and pulled the muffler to inspect the p/c. Bottom line is the p/c looked clean and no visible wear. Compression was strong on my gage. No indication of wear after 90 hours of running with careful maintenance. I think it fair to say 90 hours exceeds majority of consumer needs.
So I think he’s right. Consumer gas saws can easily outlast consumer needs with proper maintenance.
Yet they are often deemed to be junk. So it must be improper maintenance or improper set up or improperly running of the saw keeping them from outlasting their owners expectations. (Lean carb settings, dull chains, poor storage, running out of bar oil or bad fuel mixes....)
Maybe this a case where the consumer is insufficiently invested in the longevity of his/her saw? Again it’s unlikely this has improved in the last 10 years.
So, what’s the right answer and where will the industry go? Build better quality saws and urge people to spend more to buy high quality gas saws even though they don’t need them? Assume people will want to be more educated and less “lazy” and will do maintenance and and take time to learn proper techniques? YouTube is full of counter examples to that notion
Will the industry find a way to build simpler to maintain cheap consumer gas saws with self adjusting carbs that run rich but still satisfy the EPA?
Is a useful 4 stroke chainsaw possible at the consumer price range? Do these factors mean a fover shift to progressively cheaper and better plug in and battery powered saws for the consumer market?