I'll throw my two Lincolns in due to relevance.
. When we started burning wood as primary heat source, all I had was a wildthing, well the guy who took me under his wing to learn about this heating with wood stuff, he had a Jonsered 2171 (70cc)28" bar, man did that saw eat wood, I was impressed how well he handled it and the power it had. BUT, he was a more physical person than myself, and that saw fit him well, for me, too heavy, muscle fatigue set in too early in the day and that is dangerous.
. So, we went shopping for a saw that worked for me, granted, the WT was nice and light, but the vibrations and 42cc were not up to the task of 7-8 cords of hardwood that somtimes came in the form of 32"dia oak/hickory, so I ended up with an MS360 Pro 24" bar, the pro just meant compression release, that saw was something special to me, brand new, high end, expensive( I thought), and while it didn't hold a candle to the 2171, it was a good fit for me, and handled the big wood just fine, we weren't in a race.
. Well, since then, I've used quite a few saws, brands and sizes, and the 361 has great anti-vibration---so real easy on the joints, its in a decent weight range to keep fatigue away long enough to get a decent amount of work done, easy to service/maintain, good resale, and will handle a 24" bar just fine, it's not a race.
. Take the Stihl dealer up on the company offer of satisfaction, and try a 361 in some wood, then try one of the others you listed, same bar, chain, and wood size. The anti-vibe in saws today really is a great way to go.
Good luck, and let us know how it goes for ya.