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School me on electric chainsaws

Troy32323

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Joined
Jun 27, 2020
Messages
49
Location
Shoreham NY
I have the Milwaukee M18 chainsaw and will never need anything else. I have processed a lot of wood through it and can tell you it’s very impressive. The way they accomplish this is with a very thin kerf and tremendous amounts of oil. Until the chain gets dull you can carve away like a butcher. Dull chain requires sharpening and you are back in business, I give it two thumbs up.



I have a lot of Milwaukee m18 tools and really want to get the chainsaw but read a bunch of reviews about the chain tensioner bolt stripping. Made me nervous. Any problems with yours?
 
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tncatadjuster

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Joined
Jan 3, 2010
Messages
1,987
Location
Memphis, TN
I have a lot of Milwaukee m18 tools and really want to get the chainsaw but read a bunch of reviews about the chain tensioner bolt stripping. Made me nervous. Any problems with yours?

I have had no issues whatsoever, like I said it slings a lot of oil otherwise it’s flawless to me. I’ve used it to cut lumber and plywood.:D
 

Rinspeed

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Joined
Apr 26, 2020
Messages
1,819
Location
NY
I have a lot of Milwaukee m18 tools and really want to get the chainsaw but read a bunch of reviews about the chain tensioner bolt stripping. Made me nervous. Any problems with yours?





Most bolts/screws that are going into aluminum need a little dab of grease to help prevent this. That and knowing when tight is tight.
 
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DeeKay

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Joined
Nov 25, 2020
Messages
448
Location
Colorado
Most bolts/screws that are going into aluminum need a little dab of grease to help prevent this. That and knowing when tight is tight.

I might be wrong but I believe the tensioner on these is captive in just plastic and kind of gets wollowed out after a while.
 

jgromada

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Joined
Oct 13, 2011
Messages
1,017
Location
Maryland (between DC & Balt)
just pulled the trigger on getting an electric chainsaw (cordless). I ended up going with a Ryobi 18" bar model. Its a 40v HP model. I weighed getting a couple of different models after a couple of considerations.

  • I typically only use a chainsaw a couple of times a year, the rest of the time it SITS. Mostly to get rid of large branches and use in the fire pit. (no wood burning stove)
  • I'm not cutting up for a cord of wood or anything but i knew an 18/20 v model wouldn't be good enough.
  • I still have a Poulan Pro 18 in gas model and even when its been tuned and running ok (use Pure Fuel) it still remains hard to start and frustrating to use . Also have a Makita 16 in corded model that seems underpowered and VERY inconvenient (even before chain was dulled by cutting up a rotten tree). Need to get this chain sharpened w the kit i got last year.
  • Considered getting either a Husky or a Stihl is the $300-350 range, but wondered even with the ez start and other niceities whether i will eventually have issues with fuel.
  • So looking at a couple of sources considered a number of battery powered options all in the $300 to $350 range
    • Atlas 80v model from HF. I know there are ton of HF haters here but its powerful & i really didn't want yet another battery platform. I have had decent luck with all my HF powered tools.
    • The DeWalt flexvolt was tops on a number of review sites but seems over priced and that bar attachment seems to be on the flimsy side. A couple of people complained about bar flex, flimsy cover and even worse cover attachment system. But its a killer in the Farm tests. In the end decided some of these factors didn't sit well with me.
    • The Ryobi seems like it will be plenty powerful and i already have the Ryobi 40v system so instantly have some spare batteries. I have a tree to take down once i get this so i will report back.
  • Some of these reviews i have seen make me question whether some of these people really use a chainsaw much. I get it you will never get the run time of gas, but some of these seem pretty powerful.
 

Milton Shaw

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Joined
Feb 11, 2011
Messages
4,836
I bought one of the Milwaukee M12 Hatchet chain saws. I am very impressed with it and what it will cut. The chain is special on it as it has a tooth on every link instead of skipping a link like every other chain saw I have seen. Depending on the size of your lathe and the work you are planning to do it may be big enough. I saw a youtube of Stanley Dirt Monkey trying one out is why I bought it. Its light enough to be a one handed chain saw..
 

bassJAM

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Joined
Jun 10, 2020
Messages
861
Location
Cincinnati, OH
I bought one of the Milwaukee M12 Hatchet chain saws. I am very impressed with it and what it will cut. The chain is special on it as it has a tooth on every link instead of skipping a link like every other chain saw I have seen. Depending on the size of your lathe and the work you are planning to do it may be big enough. I saw a youtube of Stanley Dirt Monkey trying one out is why I bought it. Its light enough to be a one handed chain saw..

For someone who's new to chainsaws like it sounds like OP is, I wouldn't recommend a single handed saw with no a chain brake.
 
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