EFCO Brand - Please leave me your feedback!

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

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

arborealbuffoon

Wood Wh@re
Joined
Feb 1, 2007
Messages
364
Location
Iowa City, Iowa
I had a little top handle branded as a Jonsered. It was a pretty decent saw for the money. Put up with being drug around up in a tree about as well as any other saw I've tortured in that manner. And, the anti-vibe WAS better than the ones on the German saws (as mentioned previously in this thread).

My only complaint (and it's a deal-breaker for me) is the amount of foolishness required to r and r the carb. I've wrenched on some pretty ridiculous machinery, but the level of sheer buffoonery required to complete this task was more than ridiculous. Perhaps more accurately, a giant PITA.

FWIW, I am a commercial user without the resources to hire out my saw repairs. And, I get really annoyed when it takes a couple hours of suffering to accomplish what I have done on other designs in 10 minutes.
 
drkptt

drkptt

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Feb 11, 2008
Messages
160
Location
Florida
...Where are the pictures of sweet chicks holding Efco power tools? :D

...

We need videos with the Multimate quintuplets:

Efco_Multimate.jpg


MULTIMATE: EFCO italiano
 
mikefunaro

mikefunaro

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
Mar 22, 2008
Messages
3,115
Location
NWCT, Southern NY
As far as the pro saws go, modernize and get some spring AV and air injection type air filtration going if you can. The latter might be a patent matter but certainly the former.

I've had the opportunity to buy several of your saws used in the past but they need to be "modernized" so to speak.
 
Jefflac02

Jefflac02

ArboristSite Member
Joined
Dec 6, 2012
Messages
84
Location
Friendsville, md
Jesus if you have a way, tell them to remake the videos. Its 2012, those videos would be good 40 years ago when such tools were hard to get. Nowadays there's an abundance of merchandise, cheap chainsaws for the masses in every grocery store, the pros are taken care of with market leaders, you can order your weed whacker and have it delivered the next day etc, you need to _have_ and _show_ something that people want.

But to make sales you need some commercial material that's gonna convince people that your product is the real deal. And felling and limbing a 8" oak with a short intro of a rhino and some sheep, with video quality almost as good as smartphones make today ain't it. :) Sawing some draft wood, mowing 3" grass and trimming the ugliest hedge one could find and stuff like that, its filmed like a parody. :dizzy:

Compare it to a husky promo... You have some nice scenery, good image quality, zoom on this, zoom on that, different angles, slow motion the chips flying, cut some soft wood. Drop a nice tree that makes a nice thud and not some turd that the guy pushes over (without success) with his hands. If the first one doesn't make a nice thud drop another one. And the third one. Limb the tree like its a race, not like you don't know where to cut (because you picked the most retarded oak to cut). Point out why your product is better than the competition. Where are the pictures of sweet chicks holding Efco power tools? :D

Here is how a product introduction should look like:
Husqvarna 560XP Chainsaw - YouTube

I know it probably cost 10 times more to introduce 1 model than it cost Efco to introduce 20, but they'd be better off now releasing that video at all.

That is a perfect example of how GREAT marketing works. It stirs desires for a product. I am not over the world about the husky brand, but that makes me want to buy one, AND that is what it is all about!
 
Machold

Machold

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Oct 29, 2009
Messages
215
Location
Paris, Ontario
As far as the pro saws go, modernize and get some spring AV and air injection type air filtration going if you can. The latter might be a patent matter but certainly the former.

I've had the opportunity to buy several of your saws used in the past but they need to be "modernized" so to speak.

Can you give examples of what or how you "modernized". I have a 3 yr old 165, hardly used, but I have been thinking of removing the limiters a re-ajusting the mix.
 
Bret4207

Bret4207

ArboristSite Guru
Joined
Feb 3, 2006
Messages
690
Location
St Lawrence Valley, NY
I think some good points have been brought up. Efco has a good product, but lousy marketing. Efco...Echo. Problem right there. Olympic was worlds better than Efco. Same thing for the myriad of saws in the under 50cc class. a 35 and 45 would fill the market with a 12 and 14 inch bar. Make one a top handle. In the bigger stuff you really only need a couple or 3. One good heavy duty saw of at least 85 cc and a couple in the 55-70 cc class. Those are real saws. Make them high quality and long lasting and SIMPLE. No crazy chains adjustment schemes, no spaceship looking top covers concealing air filters worthy of a 454 Chevy, no teeny, tiny opening for gas and oil, no AV mounts that disintegrate in 6 months or oilers with fragile materials.

Look at it this way, Husky made it's name with 3 pro grade saws- the 266, 181 and 2100. Stihl did it with the 041, 051, 075. You don't need 35 saws in the line up. 6 would do it, 8 is probably overkill.
 
dboyd351

dboyd351

Addicted to ArboristSite
. AS Supporting Member.
Joined
Oct 23, 2011
Messages
1,517
Location
Cape Charles, VA
I think some good points have been brought up. Efco has a good product, but lousy marketing. Efco...Echo. Problem right there. Olympic was worlds better than Efco. Same thing for the myriad of saws in the under 50cc class. a 35 and 45 would fill the market with a 12 and 14 inch bar. Make one a top handle. In the bigger stuff you really only need a couple or 3. One good heavy duty saw of at least 85 cc and a couple in the 55-70 cc class. Those are real saws. Make them high quality and long lasting and SIMPLE. No crazy chains adjustment schemes, no spaceship looking top covers concealing air filters worthy of a 454 Chevy, no teeny, tiny opening for gas and oil, no AV mounts that disintegrate in 6 months or oilers with fragile materials.

Look at it this way, Husky made it's name with 3 pro grade saws- the 266, 181 and 2100. Stihl did it with the 041, 051, 075. You don't need 35 saws in the line up. 6 would do it, 8 is probably overkill.

Seems like good advice to me. Make a few saws, make them very well and build a rep on that.
 
Machold

Machold

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Oct 29, 2009
Messages
215
Location
Paris, Ontario
I think he is suggesting to Efco that they should modernize their saw offerings, not that he has done these modifications himself.

Right, I take your point. But there is the example of the excellent German SOLO saw that has refused to "thin" down its product to comply with EPA regs. Bailey's stopped selling it for this reason. I bought one they had on sale, very GOOD saw.
 
7sleeper

7sleeper

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
Feb 4, 2008
Messages
5,350
Location
Austria
I think some good points have been brought up. Efco has a good product, but lousy marketing. Efco...Echo. Problem right there. Olympic was worlds better than Efco. ....
Look at it this way, Husky made it's name with 3 pro grade saws- the 266, 181 and 2100. Stihl did it with the 041, 051, 075. You don't need 35 saws in the line up. 6 would do it, 8 is probably overkill.

Don't think that that is a good name at the moment. To many associations with Greece in that name.

7
 
dboyd351

dboyd351

Addicted to ArboristSite
. AS Supporting Member.
Joined
Oct 23, 2011
Messages
1,517
Location
Cape Charles, VA
Right, I take your point. But there is the example of the excellent German SOLO saw that has refused to "thin" down its product to comply with EPA regs. Bailey's stopped selling it for this reason. I bought one they had on sale, very GOOD saw.

I agree about Solo. I've got a 680. Guess that explains why the big saws are disappearing from their US lineup.
 
bejay

bejay

ArboristSite Member
Joined
Sep 10, 2009
Messages
74
Location
usa
Besides advertising efco really needs more dealers and a better parts distribution.
5 yr warranty is great if the parts are available to fix the saw, if there not, then its kinda useless while it may help efco sell more, but when there saw does need repair the long wait for parts has most customers probably wishing they chose another brand.
 
Machold

Machold

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Oct 29, 2009
Messages
215
Location
Paris, Ontario
Besides advertising efco really needs more dealers and a better parts distribution.
5 yr warranty is great if the parts are available to fix the saw, if there not, then its kinda useless while it may help efco sell more, but when there saw does need repair the long wait for parts has most customers probably wishing they chose another brand.

Agree. How many are ready to buy an EFCO, I wonder?
 
Bret4207

Bret4207

ArboristSite Guru
Joined
Feb 3, 2006
Messages
690
Location
St Lawrence Valley, NY
Don't think that that is a good name at the moment. To many associations with Greece in that name.

7

I was thinking the Olympic mountains out west. Whatever, one way to fix it is to keep the Efco name and create a "series", ie- Efcos new "Sierra Series" or something catchy like that. Pioneer started out as IEL, but their Pioneer saw made such and impact it changed the company name. Or go with Atlas or with Italian mountain ranges- Monti Sabatini is kinda catchy, but a mouthful.
 
Top