Choice of saw

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
liberty

liberty

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Jan 12, 2007
Messages
217
Location
Lakes region,NH
I am looking for a small saw for limbing after I drop a tree with my 372xpw. I am not a pro. I am looking at the Husky 137 or 142 Vs. Stihl ms 200 or 210. Possible other choices in that class? Pro's and cons. Thanks
 
Ray Bennett

Ray Bennett

ArboristSite Guru
Joined
Jan 31, 2006
Messages
626
Location
western maryland
I think you are wasting your money on this one, The 372 is a great limbing saw, I wish I had one. I usually use my 044 for limbing which is about the same size and weight. Thoes little saws are just gona make you mad. They only weigh about 2 or 3 lbs less and dont even have half the HP. I refuse to say it but shortly someone is gona tell you if you want a lighter saw for limming the 361 is perfect.
 
djohn

djohn

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Jan 22, 2004
Messages
113
Location
IL
The 361 is too heavy for limbing all the time IMHO...at least for a non pro wussie like me.

I much prefer my 026 or 200T for limbing, the 200T is a hell of a good running saw and is very very light.
 
2000ssm6

2000ssm6

Stihl User
Joined
Dec 31, 2006
Messages
12,087
Location
western/eastern NC
For a small lightweight saw, the ms180 would be a better alternative than that crap from lowes. If you ever use a ms200, you will fall in love. Well worth the money.

I would say go with a 260 or 5100, both awesome limbing saws and can fell/buck smaller stuff.
 
AngelofDarkness

AngelofDarkness

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
Sep 26, 2007
Messages
1,095
Location
Western Michigan
Echo CS-306 or CS-346 are a good choice for limbing. the Poulan PRO series saws aern't too bad for occasional use. I am not fond of smaller Husky saws, the 350 is the smallest Husky I would recommend outside of the small XP saws. Stihl need not be mentioned.
 
pbuehning

pbuehning

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
May 15, 2005
Messages
369
Location
NEW JERSEY
In as much as you bought it up - the MS200(rear handle) is one hell of a saw. Cuts like a light sabre, quick as a scalpel and just a great light saw; yea its expensive but it's a runner and should last a loooong time - if you remember to pick up your big saw and not bury the 200.

Flat out love it! :clap:
 
Just Mow

Just Mow

Don't touch my Willie !!!
Joined
Jul 13, 2006
Messages
5,746
Location
house
In as much as you bought it up - the MS200(rear handle) is one hell of a saw. Cuts like a light sabre, quick as a scalpel and just a great light saw; yea its expensive but it's a runner and should last a loooong time - if you remember to pick up your big saw and not bury the 200.

Flat out love it! :clap:

+1 on the MS200
 
HUSKYMAN

HUSKYMAN

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
Mar 23, 2001
Messages
3,347
Location
Birch Run, Michigan
Whats your dollar limit? You mentioned a $600 saw (200) and a $150 saw (137) in your opening post. There are a billion saws in between.

For $400 I think the Dolmar 5100s is the best saw for the money. For $300 its the 350 Husky if you can find one. For $200 get a dinky Stihl or Echo
 
ciscoguy01

ciscoguy01

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
Oct 26, 2006
Messages
2,079
Location
'daks
Smaller huskies

I am looking for a small saw for limbing after I drop a tree with my 372xpw. I am not a pro. I am looking at the Husky 137 or 142 Vs. Stihl ms 200 or 210. Possible other choices in that class? Pro's and cons. Thanks

Big mistake dude. XP huskies are nice, the 137/42 are NOT. Unless you like throwing chains, leaking oil and a super heavy saw power to weight, your better off looking at a light dolmar, i.e. the 510 or 460. The little MS-210 is a MUCH better saw than the cheap husky's, maybe not on paper, but in the field, ours has held up much better than the husky. You'll be disappointed if you go the cheap husky route. Buy a poulan from walfart, same thing only in green...

:cheers:
 
CharlieG

CharlieG

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
Sep 14, 2007
Messages
1,044
Location
Ma-ho-pac, New York
The two saw setup:70cc/50cc- your halfway there. I have the the 372, and if I had the extra $, there would also be a NE346XP or a 5100. The 5100 has the inboard clutch which is a +.
 
SawTroll

SawTroll

Information Collector
Joined
Jan 13, 2005
Messages
64,856
Location
Troms, North Norway
The two saw setup:70cc/50cc- your halfway there. I have the the 372, and if I had the extra $, there would also be a NE346XP or a 5100. The 5100 has the inboard clutch which is a +.

Yep - but the NE346xp is a tad lighter and more nimble as a limbing saw - it is sort of a trade-off. :)

If you want to go smaller, the MS200 and 339xp are the real alternatives, forget the 137, 142, 180, 210 etc......
 
Last edited:

Latest posts

Top