"Won't buy a Husky!"

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MaddBomber

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So, while loading the truck after work today, I was talking to my father's best friend about saws. He's been a wood cutter for 28 years dealing almost exclusively with hardwoods. He runs a ported Stihl MS361..
Anyway, I'm looking for a new limbing saw (been askin about MS260Pro) and mentioned the Husqvarna 346, and he said "Won't buy a Husky no matter what" He then went on to tell me about his "Piece of S#%t 371"... Apparently he used to run only Husqvarnas but after some brutal repair costs and difficult dealer-customer relations he switched to Stihl. He did rave about Husqvarna's power and speed, but said it wasn't enough to make up for the other misgivings....
He told me about the random hard starts: he rigged up to do some high limbing, fired up his saw, warmed it up and shut it off, climbed the tree and couldn't start the saw.. he spent 20 minutes pulling, pulling and pulling untill he finally threw the saw 60 feet to the ground! The repair shop found nothing wrong with it, other than a severely bent bar from the fall.
He then had a Husky 272 that gave him nothing but problems... He did say that when it was running it was a bear, but that wasn't often. First the starter recoil broke, followed by the AV, then the oiler. After a few years it needed rings, then a piston followed immediatly by a cylinder. Carb was junk, fuel lines sucked to replace and they "Always" had issues. He finally junked it at the repair shops recomendation.... He added up the repair receipts and in the first year the saw cost him just over $1600. That saw was almost enough to turn him away from Husqvarna untill....
His most recent husky (can't remember the model). It was less than 2 months old, and ran like a banshee. Anyway, he was bucking when the chain got pinched. My father made a relief cut, he freed the saw, and it seemed fine. He tried to make another cut but the saw had no power... he gave it a few revs and a horrible sound came from the crank-case (like gravel)... he reved it up again and a huge fireball blew the muffler off and caught his hand an arm on fire! He managed to extiguish himself and the saw without injury. He brought what was left of the saw to the dealer-(remember it was less than 60 days old)- and the dealer couldn't do anything for him... so he contacted Husqvarna directly and still no refund, no replacement, nothing!
He has run Stihls ever since, and is using an old 361 that he loves. Starts within 3 pulls, plenty of power, and easy to keep up with..
I run a '98 Jonsered 2065 that has been nothing but great to me, but his story (backed up by my father) is enough for me to be a Stihl man from hear on out.
 
So, while loading the truck after work today, I was talking to my father's best friend about saws. He's been a wood cutter for 28 years dealing almost exclusively with hardwoods. He runs a ported Stihl MS361..
Anyway, I'm looking for a new limbing saw (been askin about MS260Pro) and mentioned the Husqvarna 346, and he said "Won't buy a Husky no matter what" He then went on to tell me about his "Piece of S#%t 371"... Apparently he used to run only Husqvarnas but after some brutal repair costs and difficult dealer-customer relations he switched to Stihl. He did rave about Husqvarna's power and speed, but said it wasn't enough to make up for the other misgivings....
He told me about the random hard starts: he rigged up to do some high limbing, fired up his saw, warmed it up and shut it off, climbed the tree and couldn't start the saw.. he spent 20 minutes pulling, pulling and pulling untill he finally threw the saw 60 feet to the ground! The repair shop found nothing wrong with it, other than a severely bent bar from the fall.
He then had a Husky 272 that gave him nothing but problems... He did say that when it was running it was a bear, but that wasn't often. First the starter recoil broke, followed by the AV, then the oiler. After a few years it needed rings, then a piston followed immediatly by a cylinder. Carb was junk, fuel lines sucked to replace and they "Always" had issues. He finally junked it at the repair shops recomendation.... He added up the repair receipts and in the first year the saw cost him just over $1600. That saw was almost enough to turn him away from Husqvarna untill....
His most recent husky (can't remember the model). It was less than 2 months old, and ran like a banshee. Anyway, he was bucking when the chain got pinched. My father made a relief cut, he freed the saw, and it seemed fine. He tried to make another cut but the saw had no power... he gave it a few revs and a horrible sound came from the crank-case (like gravel)... he reved it up again and a huge fireball blew the muffler off and caught his hand an arm on fire! He managed to extiguish himself and the saw without injury. He brought what was left of the saw to the dealer-(remember it was less than 60 days old)- and the dealer couldn't do anything for him... so he contacted Husqvarna directly and still no refund, no replacement, nothing!
He has run Stihls ever since, and is using an old 361 that he loves. Starts within 3 pulls, plenty of power, and easy to keep up with..
I run a '98 Jonsered 2065 that has been nothing but great to me, but his story (backed up by my father) is enough for me to be a Stihl man from hear on out.

Sounds like a Crappy Husky dealer issue.
Then again if the guy has been cuttin that long, he should have owned more than a couple saws he DIDN'T have problems with...

Whachu trollin' for willis?

Stay safe!
Dingeryote
 
Ugh

I run a '98 Jonsered 2065 that has been nothing but great to me, but his story (backed up by my father) is enough for me to be a Stihl man from hear on out.

Let me get this straight, you have a ten year old red Husky that has always run great and you have not had any problems with. However, based upon the testimonials of a man whose practice is to purposely pitch his saw out of a tree, you are now a Stihl man because his "OLD" 361 is great? Stihl or not, you treat a saw like that and u get what u get. The 361 is a great saw, but just to be on the safe side I'll treat mine as if it were a quality tool and try to get ten or twenty years out of it too.
:censored::monkey::chainsaw:
 
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So, while loading the truck after work today, I was talking to my father's best friend about saws. He's been a wood cutter for 28 years dealing almost exclusively with hardwoods. He runs a ported Stihl MS361..
Anyway, I'm looking for a new limbing saw (been askin about MS260Pro) and mentioned the Husqvarna 346, and he said "Won't buy a Husky no matter what" He then went on to tell me about his "Piece of S#%t 371"... Apparently he used to run only Husqvarnas but after some brutal repair costs and difficult dealer-customer relations he switched to Stihl. He did rave about Husqvarna's power and speed, but said it wasn't enough to make up for the other misgivings....
He told me about the random hard starts: he rigged up to do some high limbing, fired up his saw, warmed it up and shut it off, climbed the tree and couldn't start the saw.. he spent 20 minutes pulling, pulling and pulling untill he finally threw the saw 60 feet to the ground! The repair shop found nothing wrong with it, other than a severely bent bar from the fall.
He then had a Husky 272 that gave him nothing but problems... He did say that when it was running it was a bear, but that wasn't often. First the starter recoil broke, followed by the AV, then the oiler. After a few years it needed rings, then a piston followed immediatly by a cylinder. Carb was junk, fuel lines sucked to replace and they "Always" had issues. He finally junked it at the repair shops recomendation.... He added up the repair receipts and in the first year the saw cost him just over $1600. That saw was almost enough to turn him away from Husqvarna untill....
His most recent husky (can't remember the model). It was less than 2 months old, and ran like a banshee. Anyway, he was bucking when the chain got pinched. My father made a relief cut, he freed the saw, and it seemed fine. He tried to make another cut but the saw had no power... he gave it a few revs and a horrible sound came from the crank-case (like gravel)... he reved it up again and a huge fireball blew the muffler off and caught his hand an arm on fire! He managed to extiguish himself and the saw without injury. He brought what was left of the saw to the dealer-(remember it was less than 60 days old)- and the dealer couldn't do anything for him... so he contacted Husqvarna directly and still no refund, no replacement, nothing!
He has run Stihls ever since, and is using an old 361 that he loves. Starts within 3 pulls, plenty of power, and easy to keep up with..
I run a '98 Jonsered 2065 that has been nothing but great to me, but his story (backed up by my father) is enough for me to be a Stihl man from hear on out.

Does this guy do any aqua logging?:hmm3grin2orange:
 
man my 350 did that.i was clearing a road with my dad and the saw gerked and rumbled kinda off and sounded like a sraight 4 with a rod nock ,it stopped,tried to start it again nothin.tried every thing.now in about a week im gonna take "care of it" on the back 300 acers with the .357 magnum.
 
I wish to hell I would have read this earlier - I mightn't have bought my 3120XP - imagine a fireball from a 119cc saw!!! It'd have to be around a 20 megaton mushy cloud.
Might sell it after such a non biased report.......NOT.
 
. . . . ., but his story (backed up by my father) is enough for me to be a Stihl man from hear on out.

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I think when you hear something bad about a saw company you tend to stay away from them. I had a few people rave about :censored: and I was considering buying one. I went into a dealer who use to sell :censored: and said he dropped :censored: because his rentals did not last as long as the other brand. To him it was an indication the saws were not as good. I am sure :censored:saws are just fine but that story kept me from buying one even thought it was only one story. :chainsaw:
 
At work we have 3-4 55's. a 365 special, 2-262's, and a 570. They sit sometimes for months, sometimes are used like crazy for months, and used by everybody and their brother. And we never had any problems. Beauty is in the eye f the beholder. Its kinda like arguing ford over chevy.
 
I read from the internet that running stihl causes global warming and makes your balls shrink, also may lead to infertility....


















:monkey:

Blis,

My friend, did you catch it in time? Or, do you have the symtoms?

Joat
 
Bout the only thing I ever seen go wrong with a husky was we were dropped a good sized locust and the owner wanted the wood. We bucked up the trunk as all he had was a 353 that looked to be like new. As we were loading upa and cleaning up he walked over and his saw was frozen stiff and it sounded like crap the whole time he was running it and it was sure enough seized. Although he wouldn't admit it I think not realizing he either ran straight gas through it or did an amateur carb adjustment to make it faster either way I have ran husky and stihl my whole life and they are 6 one half dozen the other, but to be honest my stihls tend to need more tinkering with to get em right, but no major issues after until they have hundreds if not thousands of hours and they just crap out.
 
Funny bs story! My husqvarna saws have been more relibale than a Timex.They take a licking and keep on ticking.I can say the same for the Stihls,both great saws. I think the owner was the problem more than the saw.
 

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