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Posted
Apart from the excellent advice already offered...I use the lightest possible saw that is big enough for the task. Husqvarnas all the way for me, but whatever brand you use , similar principles apply. 15" softwood? a 346 is fine. 15" hardwood I'd go a 365. If you're regularly getting into bigger stuff like hardwood firewood >20" I would consider getting something with more power. You learn when a saw is struggling so why push a wee saw to its limits? I also recommend using the shortest bar as is sensible. I never run the max size bar for a given saw as default, only when totally necessary e.g. a massive tree, I've got a 36" bar which goes on the 395, but then I'm straight back to something more sensible like 24 at soonest opportunity.

 

Pretty much this ^

 

Although when out on site, most of the time what dictates wheich saw is picked up is which one's sharpest at the time...... :lol:

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Posted

I do that with my rifles and scopes if Mrs found out how much I'd paid she kill me

The bar you all mentioned is the size of Blade ? The cc is the motor or engine size?

 

 

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Posted
Apart from the excellent advice already offered...I use the lightest possible saw that is big enough for the task.....

 

15" softwood? a 346 is fine. 15" hardwood I'd go a 365.

Eh? 365 is never going to be the lightest option! Heavy tank of a saw but slow.

15 inch bar has to be a 550/560 regardless of hard or softwood

 

 

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Posted

Steve after 30 years of marriage my bxxxs well shrunk hence small purse ! Well that's my excuse for today ! How are you doing [emoji108]

 

 

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Posted
I do that with my rifles and scopes if Mrs found out how much I'd paid she kill me

The bar you all mentioned is the size of Blade ? The cc is the motor or engine size?

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Arbtalk

 

No its the size of the bar, a chainsaw has a guide bar.

Posted

Agreed the 365 isn't the lightest but for a cheaper yet robust saw that pulls through more than its fair share it's a firm favourite of mine. Light in comparison to 576 and upwards I guess is what I was driving at...

 

If I have gauged the situation correctly, Nikk does not have a lot of chainsaw experience. Could be the right saw for instance if doing a lot of firewood. Yes bar = blade and cc = engine capacity in cubic centimetres funnily enough. (not strictly the best guide to power etc)

 

I particularly like the sharpest saw in the truck comment Mr. Sheppard. Isn't snedding 13" Sitka a 395 a total B****** though!!

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