SK-Mike
Well-known member
Have always owned Stihl saws.
MS180 (My 1st chainsaw, always worked good, no complaints, sold to my brother)
MS250 (Piece of junk, sold to neighbor, told him upfront the issues, he wanted it bad, couldn't fix it so he ended up selling it also).
MS181 (Sweet little saw- sort of wish I'd kept)
MS 261 (Still have, Awesome saw, my 1st pro grade saw)
MS 362 (Still own, Another great pro saw)
Recently sold a Handgun I didn't need, took the money and purchased 2 New Husqvarna Chainsaws.
543XP-16" Bar, Pro grade saw, this saw is really sweet, especially for the small to medium tasks.
550XP-18" Bar, Pro grade saw, This is a direct competitor to the Stihl MS 261, both 18" bars, its a coin toss as to which I like better.
I must admit, as a life long Stihl user, I am really impressed with Husqvarna build quality and how they are engineered/designed a bit different than the Stihl. The Stihl are simple to disassemble to work on and clean out, a novice can figure it out. The Husky seems a bit more sophisticated, I can see a Newbie having more difficulty assembling the Husky and getting everything fit together properly, but if your familiar with saws then you will not have any issues.
MS180 (My 1st chainsaw, always worked good, no complaints, sold to my brother)
MS250 (Piece of junk, sold to neighbor, told him upfront the issues, he wanted it bad, couldn't fix it so he ended up selling it also).
MS181 (Sweet little saw- sort of wish I'd kept)
MS 261 (Still have, Awesome saw, my 1st pro grade saw)
MS 362 (Still own, Another great pro saw)
Recently sold a Handgun I didn't need, took the money and purchased 2 New Husqvarna Chainsaws.
543XP-16" Bar, Pro grade saw, this saw is really sweet, especially for the small to medium tasks.
550XP-18" Bar, Pro grade saw, This is a direct competitor to the Stihl MS 261, both 18" bars, its a coin toss as to which I like better.
I must admit, as a life long Stihl user, I am really impressed with Husqvarna build quality and how they are engineered/designed a bit different than the Stihl. The Stihl are simple to disassemble to work on and clean out, a novice can figure it out. The Husky seems a bit more sophisticated, I can see a Newbie having more difficulty assembling the Husky and getting everything fit together properly, but if your familiar with saws then you will not have any issues.