SS Sniper
Addicted to ArboristSite
I believe we're on the same mindset here as well and you bring up valid points. Maybe they were rushed to the market, but I think there's much pressure on the manufactures to produce better products and compete with rivals, all while the EPA and growing regulations are breathing down their necks.Matthew I believe we're on the same track for the most part. A good engineer will be versatile, some are, some not so much.
One huge factor to not overlook is how controlling management is and how it influences the final product. Why use transfer covers? It was likely to save money! Air leaks here we come. Non of us really know why they did what they did, but we know the outcome, which hasn't been bright. And with the constant and ongoing issues with the 5 seaside saws, it really is like they rushed them to make without a proper shakedown whatsoever. Remember this is all just my opinion, for whatever it's worth.
Sent from my HTC One_M8 using Tapatalk
And, this is the first series to have computers on sawsfor Husky. The technology has been around like people have been saying, but mistakes are understandable given that they went from the old school 3 series to the (mostly) computerized 5 series. No matter how much testing you do during demos, you're still going to have hiccups during the early days of release. How detrimental these failures are is in thing, but how efficiently and quickly Husky reacts is another.
It's to my understanding that most, if not almost all of the "problems" not due to operator error have been sorted out for the most part? Regarding Autotune.