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Chainsaw
Now after a few years, looking back on the Aftermarket "saw" experience
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<blockquote data-quote="Ted Jenkins" data-source="post: 7732529" data-attributes="member: 143473"><p>I believe that I have enough facts to support my point of view on this. Aftermarket saws out perform the OEM saw by 10:1. Saws manufactured with in the last ten years are pure junk. I need a saw that can be left out in the snow and have water and oil poured into the tanks and still run. No electronic tuning will suffice. If water gets into a tank I need to be able to rinse out debris change carburetors in a hour and go back to work. For some that want a automatic saw will not agree. I go to a remote area for several weeks with an assortment of saws to cut. If a saw will not perform it will likely be hammered into tiny fragments and poured into the scrap pile. Only once did I take a pile back to the dealer telling him I was not impressed with the Stihl line. He said maybe the carburetor could be salvaged. Thanks</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ted Jenkins, post: 7732529, member: 143473"] I believe that I have enough facts to support my point of view on this. Aftermarket saws out perform the OEM saw by 10:1. Saws manufactured with in the last ten years are pure junk. I need a saw that can be left out in the snow and have water and oil poured into the tanks and still run. No electronic tuning will suffice. If water gets into a tank I need to be able to rinse out debris change carburetors in a hour and go back to work. For some that want a automatic saw will not agree. I go to a remote area for several weeks with an assortment of saws to cut. If a saw will not perform it will likely be hammered into tiny fragments and poured into the scrap pile. Only once did I take a pile back to the dealer telling him I was not impressed with the Stihl line. He said maybe the carburetor could be salvaged. Thanks [/QUOTE]
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