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Posted

Okay new member here so be gentle if its been asked 5 million times already.

 

We've got a bunch of 260s (with 14") and a 441 (with 24") , and while they get the job done , recently I am finding a problem that we've got jobs where the 260 isnt man enough , and the 441 is overkill (also some of my smaller/female staff find it difficult to start the 441 and/or find it a beast to work with all day)

 

I'm thinking maybe a 361 with 20" would be the way to go as a compromise , but i'd be interested in hearing your views

 

For background we are a Ranger team, and are largely engaged in either storm clearance or felling dead/dangerous trees, we don't work aloft (unless standing on top of the truck counts as aloft :lol: ) and the biggest trees we are likelyt deal with are about 30" dia.

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Posted

The 361 is no longer available, and has been replaced with the 362. Although a good saw not as keen as the 361 IMO. Husky offer the 357 i believe which is a good tool, and have just brought out the 560xp, about which there is a current thread running on here describing peoples experiences so far. I run a 16" and sometimes an 18" on my 362. TBH i dont think it would handle a 20" as well as the 361 did!!

Posted

thats helpful cheers - I'd like to stay with stihl if I can because all our other saws are stihl, and also because we are out in the sticks and our nearest dealer doesn't stock husky.

 

what's next up from a 362 these days ? (course there's also the option of buying a 361 or 036 second hand if i can find a good one)

Posted

I think the 441 is the next up from the 362. If you want to stick with stihl then go for a 362- it is still a very good saw by any standards......i was just in love with my 361...it got liberated from the side of the road last december though......

Posted (edited)

okay thanks for that

 

How easy is the 362 to start ? (at 6,4 and 15 stone, the 441 doesnt bother me but my estate ranger is a girl who's about 5,2 and a tad over half my weight and she really struggles to pull it even with the decompression button pressed)

 

(incidentally i'm not being discrimanatory or patronising in observing this, its just a fact - quite often she needs me or another guy to start it for her, but once the saw is running she's the best chainsaw handler/treefaller on our team by a country mile)

Edited by Head Ranger Pete
Posted
I find it easy....but then i find my 088 easy too!

 

who are, you the incredible hulk ?? ;)

 

I used to have an 060 and I got rid of that because it was too hard to start on a cold morning - I dont even want to think about the 088 :biggrin:

Posted
put 18 inch bar on the 441 and get a 460 or 576 or something like that with 24 inch bar, what i would do anyway:001_rolleyes:

 

I'm not sure i understand the logic - surely difficulty in starting the saw is down to the size of the engine she's turning over rather than the bar length , so putting a shorter bar on it wont really help

 

and getting a bigger saw is definite no no - I'd be the only one able to use it which would be pretty pointless.

Posted

Hi Pete. I started in conservation work. Its a difficult compromise and i dont know your workload but I would have thought having a saw in between would be a good idea, expense allowing, since you have a range of operator strengths and machine power requirements. I wouldnt ditch the lighter saws because a day of small trees/clearance/rhody bashing is much safer and probably more safely & effectively performed with the 260s.

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