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How long do you actually run a saw in a day
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<blockquote data-quote="slowp" data-source="post: 8182065" data-attributes="member: 13863"><p>I ran one to take my first bucking certification test. After that, I wanted one. They weighed about the same as Old Sparkless but just ran smoother. I got one for me, marked down as a major dealer was getting rid of them. Rumor was that they had boxes and boxes of 440s and had to make room for the 441s. We bought one (Twinkle) for work too. Kinda got a lecture about that but it was an act now apologize later thing and the guy who wasn't happy didn't understand much about saws. He told us to get a small saw and we reasoned that a 440 was kind of small. Anyway, it was, as a logger used to say, Justright.</p><p></p><p>My hands were messed up by earlier stuff--thinning with an old saw, bicycle riding, squeezing a paint gun, etc.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="slowp, post: 8182065, member: 13863"] I ran one to take my first bucking certification test. After that, I wanted one. They weighed about the same as Old Sparkless but just ran smoother. I got one for me, marked down as a major dealer was getting rid of them. Rumor was that they had boxes and boxes of 440s and had to make room for the 441s. We bought one (Twinkle) for work too. Kinda got a lecture about that but it was an act now apologize later thing and the guy who wasn't happy didn't understand much about saws. He told us to get a small saw and we reasoned that a 440 was kind of small. Anyway, it was, as a logger used to say, Justright. My hands were messed up by earlier stuff--thinning with an old saw, bicycle riding, squeezing a paint gun, etc. [/QUOTE]
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