cheezstake
FNG
- Joined
- Nov 1, 2025
- Messages
- 11
i have a Milwaukee m18 fuel saw that is great for small stuff around the house. and a stihl ms500i for everything else
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5 acres --- just buy a battery operated one. 18" bar will pretty much do what you need. Now, if you have some really "huge trees" you may need something more substantial., unless you know how to go around one.
Get a battery operated one --- when it depletes the battery, throw another one on it and go ----
Also, if you haven't been through formal training or been trained by someone who has, I read through this book before doing a lot of chainsaw work and found it valuable. Lots of ways to get hurt if you dont know what you're doing.
Forget a book ----- I'll say it will help someone that already knows his craft. ----- A chainsaw is not a tool to play with for sure --- It isn't hitting your thumb with a hammer type tool.
If you want to learn, you better have someone knowledgeable with you.
Reminds me of a movie with Rock Hudson learning how to be an outdoorsman from reading a book.
However, we are arguing semantics on this, the OP may know more than me about how to cut up or fell a tree. He just wanted our opinion on a chainsaw.
OP, the battery operated one with 18" bar if you don't use it a lot. There isn't worries about gumming up for lack of use, etc. EGO, Greenworks -- DeWalt, Mil., Makita - if you already have their batteries and sets --- Even a Senix will be fine for some.
My first thought was "what if you dont have anyone more knowledgeable to join you?" but i guess a guy could google chainsaw safety classes.
The book and some related youtube videos was how I learned. I had folks in my family that had done a fair bit of cutting with a chainsaw but none professionally or had been formally trained so just following their lead would have been worse than the book/youtube method.
Agreed. I regularly witness my chainsaw mentors (father and father-in-law) employ unsafe techniques (felling with no notch, not clearing an escape path, not wearing safety glasses, etc). Books and YouTube videos have been helpful to me for learning the basics of chainsaw safety and learning to judge which mentors I should trust. Reading and watching can’t replace experience, but chainsaw work is dangerous enough that you may not survive your first mistake, so I would recommend arming yourself with as much knowledge as possible before you begin.I've learned a lot from books.
Sometimes people "more knowledgeable" than you can have some pretty well developed bad habits. All experience isn't created equal. I know people who have fired a lot rounds who do not have the best firearm safety practices.
Mentor's definitely shorten the learning curve, but it's hard to distinguish between sound advice and bad advice if you're new to something. Less likely to find advice like "chainbrakes are for sissies" in a published book.
I bought a CS590 out of necessity when I had a spruce split during a windstorm.I had a stihl 271 farmboss, it was great. Its motor seized up and, although I plan to repair it myself eventually, I was told to have it repaired would cost so much I might as well buy a new one. I was in between the the following for my farm use:
Stihl M261 C-M
Husqvarna 550xp mk ii
Echo CS590
All are professional grade chainsaws. Narrowed it down to the echo and stihl, and then went to buy them and the guy in the shop, which had both, said he honestly loved them both and I’d be happy with either, BUT, the echo was only $383 compared to the Stihl which was almost double, AND the echo had a 5 year warranty compared to the Stihls 1 year (both have a 1 year warranty for commercial use). Needless to say, the echo was an easy choice and it has been fantastic. It also had a larger motor than the echo and the option to go all the way up to a 24” bar. The stihl can only go up to 20”. I got it in the 20” version anyway since that can meet 99% of my needs. I’ve already put it to use and I like it even more than I liked my farm boss.
I’ll also add, I do love stihl, and my stepdad has been a life long stihl fan, he has multiple stihl chainsaws and weedwackers, but after he cut up a few trees with the CS 590, he went right out and bought one as well.
Here is a question for super knowledgeable guys.. If I wanted to buy a used chainsaw from marketplace or craigslist and stumbled across a saw thats priced great but seller says it doesn't run. What tools would I want to bring for a quick diagnosis? I ask because i recently found a 461 semi local for a screaming deal, but seller says it hasn't been run in 3 years and he can't get it started
what are we calling a screaming deal?
I love used Stihl saws because they have always been easy to diagnose.Here is a question for super knowledgeable guys.. If I wanted to buy a used chainsaw from marketplace or craigslist and stumbled across a saw thats priced great but seller says it doesn't run. What tools would I want to bring for a quick diagnosis? I ask because i recently found a 461 semi local for a screaming deal, but seller says it hasn't been run in 3 years and he can't get it started
unless you have time and or money, I recommend people new to chainsaws stay away from used saws unless they know it's history.I would cruise marketplace and look for a Stihl 044, 046 0r 461. I abhor saws that won't start and all homeowner and ranch saws eventually fit that description. I have a couple 372's and they are good saws, but boy are they temperamental.
If the bar is in reasonably good shape $350 is pretty decent. 461's didn't have a long life span before they were replaced. Usually there's a reason (I'm not a stihl fanatic but follow them and own enough of them 660, 460, 201T). IIRC 461's had some reoccuring issues but can't remember what they were now. similar to 441's which i believe were crankcase/bearing problems. the 462's however have been an unbelieavable saw and the 044/046/440/460's IMO were (to date) stihls best saw they ever made.$350 and comes with a 25" bar. Seems all the plastics and sideplate are intack
I always pulled the spark plug and muffler to look at cylinder/piston.Here is a question for super knowledgeable guys.. If I wanted to buy a used chainsaw from marketplace or craigslist and stumbled across a saw thats priced great but seller says it doesn't run. What tools would I want to bring for a quick diagnosis? I ask because i recently found a 461 semi local for a screaming deal, but seller says it hasn't been run in 3 years and he can't get it started
There was definitely a period where the M-Tronics had issues and a year or so of 362's were an example of that. problem coils iircInteresting. I had read stories like that prior to buying but the C model is what the shop had when i was buying and it's been great. Actually, it did have issues starting once after getting hot and shutting down and i thought "aw shit, here we go" but ive never had an issue again and with my use its always on and off. How long did you run it before offloading it? Well past any break-in and tuning window for the saw?
How long ago was the saw purchased? I know they have had multiple m-tronic updates.