Who has the best internet pricing on Huskys?

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Newfie,
I would first like to apologize for any past dealings with us that went bad. We do thousands of dollars of warranty work every month and only about 60%-70% are saws that we've sold. All Husqvarna requires is a sales receipt with a date and a serial number. I think it's great that your local guy helped you out with the piston. It's good for him, and it's good for Husqvarna. I hope it wasn't me you dealt with the first time, but if you or anyone else reading this has a problem with Bailey's. Please feel free to contact me at 800 322 4539 ext.248 or [email protected] Home Phone- (yeah right!)
Gregg

baileys_logo_arboristsite_1.gif

Grande Dog
Master Mechanic
Discount Arborist Equipment and Tree Care Supplies
 
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Hey Gregg,

Thanks for the concern. No, it wasn't you I dealt with, this was about 4 years ago anyhow. All my dealings w/ Bailey's concerning yourself have been top notch.(Thanks for lighting that fire under Brian's a$$ regarding the log trailer). As a matter of fact Brian was excellent in his assistance when JMS shipped me the new trailer w/ a cracked casting on one of the hydraulic cylinders.(and JMS was great in getting my rig up and running very quickly) :)

Like I said, I still like you enough to do business. :p ;)
 
Norwalk Power Equipment Company has good prices. I got a 346 for $346. It had an air leak and has been in the shop a couple times. But my local dealer has no problem honoring my warrantee, and i think the huskies have a 2 years.
 
Well, being a newbie AND from Alaska, let me relay my experience internet shopping for a new saw.

I did a lot of surfing, as out here in the Arctic bush is ain't like there is saw dealer right behind each mountain. My biggest gripe was (is) that those outfits offering "free shipping", well, that just doesn't apply to "foreign countries", as some have referred Alaska as.

I found a great price on a Husky 350 at Southwest Fasteners, which offered free shipping everywhere in the US but Alaska and Hawaii. The "extra fee" for shipping through them amounted to $87. First, I asked them to ship it via USPS, which would have cost them (consequently, me) less than $30. Can't do, they said, only UPS. Well, UPS does come here, but for $87, no thanks. Then I asked, hey, you offer free shipping to, say Seattle, correct? Yep, sure do. OK, says me, credit me what it would cost you to ship to Seattle, and le me know what the balance is. What?, they say, can't do. Why not?, seems only fair. Long story short, I hung up.

Next call, Baileys. Yes, we have the saw, yes we ship to Alaska, yes we ship via the postal service. It can go out tomorrow. Big smile by me, money for Baileys.

For me, any company who does not do the post office, or treats me like I am calling from Guatamala gets no business from me.

Hmmm, tomorrow I need to call Baileys and get me a case, a couple of 3/16 files and guides, extra chain....maybe they might be stoked to hear that I MAY be their furthest north customer, but I'm willing to bet I AM their furthest west customer in the United States, which by the way, Alaska is part of!

Thanks, Baileys.

Nate
Nome, Alaska
 
Grande Dog: Shucks, beat out by both Barrow and Adak. Beat bad, too. Barrow is way north of me, and Adak quite a ways west. Oh well...

Oregon_Rob: Ice.. Tried a chainsaw once, other than the constant stream of salt water on your pant leg, it cut nicely. It was an old clunker Homelite, we were using it to make holes in the Bering Sea to lay crab pots in the winter. Had to get it right home afterward, as it was a frozen hunk. Never did get all the salt off of it, and it died a horrible death the following spring. It was a cancerous mess stem to stern. We then discovered making intersecting holes with the Jiffy ice auger was the way of choice. In short order we would cut 3' square blocks, 3 feet thick, then push them under the ice pack with 8 or 10 foot poles, where the current would carry them away. 4 blocks per hole, and we had a relatively square 6 foot abyss to send the pot down 40 feet to the ocean floor. Lots of work, but eating steamed King Crab legs all winter long made the efforts worthwhile.
 
glens said:
In light of the fact that the NY setup requires reporting them on the state income tax form...

Glen

Glen, This may have changed, but as of tax day for the year 2003, the tax form ambiguously "suggested" voluntary reporting of internet and mail order purchases but it was not legally required as I understand. What next, will New York require that we declare all out of state purchases that we made in person and did not pay NYS taxes on?

I can drive 40 miles and buy tax free stuff on land owned by the Oneida Indians that they claim is sovereign territory, although there is no legal standing to support them, hence the ongoing Oneida Indian land claim in the US Supreme Court.

At any rate, the Oneida position of sovereignity is very similar to that of the individual states, and I would expect to see the issue of sales tax on interstate sales viewed in much the same way when tested at the US Supreme Court level. If New York is allowed to enforce collection of sales tax on all out of state sales, it could have a huge impact on many other states. I don`t think the battle has been fought yet and consequently don`t think that New York is legally allowed yet to do what they are attempting to do.

Russ
 
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And don`t forget that NYS retailers aren`t collecting sales tax for goods sold to entities outside of NYS.

How does that figure in to your reasoning?

Russ
 
Russ, I'd hate to get moderated for hijacking a thread, but you raise an interesting point.  I must admit that I've always assumed the Indian Nations were indeed sovereign and that the U.S. government had no jurisdiction over/among/within them.  I stumbled upon http://www.upstate-citizens.org/ where it's obvious they, in part, wish to force the tribal merchants to become agents of the State to collect and submit State sales tax on non-tribal sales, as it will help the non-tribal residents in the surrounding areas.  I wonder; does this organization propose to pay the tribal merchants for this labor?  http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/naind/html/na_033000_reservations.htm and http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/naind/html/na_019600_lawsofindian.htm are a couple of interesting reads (among those in the "Entries" link at their upper left) for a balanced-sounding explanation of at least those two topics.  I guess I wish I could justify spending more time researching the general topic.

Regarding the collection of tax on items bought elsewhere, I agree it's a sticky subject.&nbsp; I don't so much see a problem with wanting it for items purchased tax-free elsewhere and brought into the state (distinct from one bringing the already-owned "goods" with them at the time they relocate to the state).&nbsp; New York State's law on that may be recent or old, I don't know.&nbsp; In another thread recently I'd presented a googled link to the State of Michigan's web site which clearly showed their law to be something like 75 years established, so I'd hope <i>it</i> would have been tested in court by now.

The thing that's puzzling to me is the situation where one might pay the sales tax in a distant location, thus not be liable for it locally.&nbsp; I'd guess it would have to be the result of two States agreeing to that condition simultaneously.&nbsp; I don't pretend to have a clue how or why that might work.&nbsp; Evidently New York State is not collecting sales tax for items shipped out of state, which is correct behavior (but they do collect it for over-the-counter sales to non-residents, right?), so they likewise have the authority to collect it on stuff shipped into the state.&nbsp; I'd bet the law is well-established, and that if you researched it, you'd see big corporations, et al, have been "voluntarily" complying all along.&nbsp; It probably is not cost-effective to go after every little private chainsaw-buyer.&nbsp; But if times get much tougher, don't be surprised to see the State wringing the dishcloth a little tighter.

At any rate, New York, and other states, will do whatever they want under color of law unless/until such time as it has been decided in court that they cannot.&nbsp; These particular concepts are not novel.

So the filing of your State sales/use tax is voluntary?&nbsp; The Federal Income Tax is also "voluntary".&nbsp; Does that mean you don't have to pay it even if you actually are liable for it?&nbsp; Personally, I'm an advocate of doing away with the IRS and having a 5% National sales tax with no deductions, ifs, ands, or buts.&nbsp; Uncle Sam would recover more money than he'd know what to do with, at lesser cost, and we'd be able to retain our full rights to privacy.&nbsp; Sadly, I fear it's not about the money...

Glen
 
Glen, it's a sticky subject all the way around. Doing away with the IRS as you propose is indeed an intersting concept. More on that later.
 
The idea that indian reservations are not under the jurisdiction of the US government is laughable. The US government is what props these reservations up. That and casino money that the US government allows them to operate.
 
Baileys is all good for buying online, I have got a bit of gear from them now and am very happy with their whole game from price to getting the goods to me some 11,000kms away. They have great communication and work hard to get the gear Im after.
 
has anybody dealt with Norwalk Power Equip? They have some killer deals... a 353 for 320 with 2 extra chains... bout 20 cheaper than baileys plus the chains.... Would get me by for the rest of the winter till I could get a couple of more chains since they are different than what runs on my homleites, poulan and John Deere.
 
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