I bought this electric chainsaw last spring to be kept in the woodshop for at least two reasons.
One is that my wood burning furnace is there and some times I want to cut off an odd limb or knot so the piece will fit in the furnace. If I get short of wood in terrible weather I can cart in some longer logs and chop them to length inside out of the rain or screaming freezing wind.
The second is that I can use it to to cut odd pieces to size for mounting for lathe turning. It also works well for odd trimming jobs like in framing or timber use.
This one is a Remington 16" bar "Versa-saw", not the lighter "Limb & Trim" they have made for many years. Fairly inexpensive as chainsaws go but cuts well. Obviously not what I would buy to clear-cut a forest of giant redwoods
For woods use I have a Stihl I also bought new last spring, a couple of good older Poulans, a Homelight and a very light but fast little Echo I use for limbing. I used to have a larger Poulan-Pro but it was killing my shoulder just pulling the starter rope so I gave it to my son. He still has it but doesn't really like it. His main saw is a farm model Stihl he bought new last spring. The Poulan is now his back-up saw. BTW, my Stihl has a "soft start" feature that my shoulder likes a lot.
I'll look later to see what other tools I keep in the woodshop that are kind of "semi-related"...
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