Never been really popular here because it's very heavy and, much more critical, uses a ton of fuel. It makes a fine collector piece however, since it's mostly metal and with an unusual paint scheme, at least for early saws.
Be sure to get one stamped as "Antivib", meaning it has vibration dampening. Also check the fuel tank: first series saws had a metal tank right next to the cylinder. This meant they boiled the fuel over after less than half an hour of work. Second series saws introduced a plastic tank inside the metal one, not unlike period Echo's and others. This resulted in reduced fuel capacity but also in no more boiling fuel. The plastic tank could be retrofitted to earlier saws.
Also take note late-build Castor's tend to use some Alpina parts (mufflers, sprocket cover etc) and introduced what Castor called an "lubrication supplement" meaning a manual pump to increase bar oil flow during operation. It's thumb operated and wasn't a particularly bright idea...
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