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The Milwaukee Fuel that I have easily surpasses my older Stihl . . . Easy to start. Charges quickly. And the torque of the electric motor makes cutting a breeze. I'm a convert.
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At 80 years old, he'll get more fun out of not having to put as much work into using the saw as the others would require.
Just my opinion from 70 yrs old. |
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Thanks for the input! |
Sorry, I got confused there on what he had vs what was being looked at. Happens easily lately.
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I also don't see how that 'auto chain sharpening' stone would work. I've sharpened chainsaw chains and that doesn't look like it'd be sharpening the correct edge unless they've changed the configuration of the cutting surfaces significantly from what I remember them being.
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I heard somewhere that all cordless tools will need to share batteries at some point? |
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Total energy is conserved (Ah x V) or watt hours. Best to check the watt hour rating since dewalt and others use deceptive marketing on this sort of thing. The 56v 7.5 Ah Ego battery (420 Whrs) on my lawnmower is about the size of a small shoe box. Batteries should be close to a couple lbs per hundred watt hours as a gut check https://www.northerntool.com/shop/tools/product_200747002_200747002?cm_mmc=Google-pla&utm_source=Google_PLA&utm_medium=Power%20Tools %20%3E%20Power%20Tool%20Batteries%20%2B%20Chargers %20%3E%20Power%20Tool%20Batteries&utm_campaign=DEW ALT&utm_content=81044&gclid=Cj0KCQiAkNiMBhCxARIsAI DDKNULFblJBVRitJTu218WsvW3aaF0KjzvmzVH8bQdPnBjUp-804YL8i0aAn6BEALw_wcB&gclsrc=aw.ds |
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Thanks for pointing that out. The way that saw cuts, I still think he might be ahead of the game with a saw and three batteries vs a saw and two with one being a 9ah and the other being a 4ah. More hand wringing! |
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If you haven't watched the videos, check out the third one I posted. It compares some of the electric saws to a smaller Stihl gas powered. The Dewalt actually outperforms the Stihl. Granted it probably won't cut like that for as long but that's still pretty impressive. |
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Electric power is ideal for high power low duty cycle things. Makes a bunch of sense for a chainsaw if you are not a professional logger I think |
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My son will be here next week and we will cut and split a lot of wood. He can run all day with the old Stihl Wood Boss. I am good for about an hour these days and I am back in shape for 65. Where the electric chain saw really shines is branching, prunning and clean-up...maintenance tasks rather than making a living cutting wood. I also use it for wood fence repair. It cuts and notches oak boards like a surgeon. Quote:
They are the 75% solution here on the farm for certain tasks. The one area where the battery stuff just doesn't' work is weed whipping/the plastic-tined whips. The 27 year-old Stihl WW is great ergonomically and we will whip for hours at certain times of the year. |
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We have Milwaukee and a Stihl. I picked up one of those harbor frieght Atlas's for myself. I cut up a lot of 6x6s for deck posts. It is perfect for that. . |
Vinny,
Would you lay into some 8" or bigger ash with that Atlas. I'm watching some videos on it now but my primary concern is build quality and how it will do on larger stuff. |
Nick,
I've only had it a couple months. Haven't got into any real heavy duty cutting yet. Mainly PT 6×6s and a few small tree branches like 4, 6in oak or pine. Build quality seems decent. Nowhere near Stihl or Husky level, but I've seen a lot worse. It's definitely w better than the corded Oregon I have. Time will tell! . |
I forgot about this thread....
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/1071172-mini-cordless-chainsaw.html |
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