assateague wrote:The tank may be cracked now, but yes, it had gas in it. Seriously, every Husky I've owned has turned into a piece of shit inside 18 months. Go great for a year, then shit the bed. I'm done with them.
Eric Haynes wrote:assateague wrote:The tank may be cracked now, but yes, it had gas in it. Seriously, every Husky I've owned has turned into a piece of shit inside 18 months. Go great for a year, then shit the bed. I'm done with them.
I've got both, and both start every time. Only real difference I see is that my husq is a commercial saw made for day in and day out cutting and the Stihl is just your typical "homeowners" grade. I do notice that the "homeowners" grade Husqs seem to have a harder time being reliable.
assateague wrote:Eric Haynes wrote:assateague wrote:The tank may be cracked now, but yes, it had gas in it. Seriously, every Husky I've owned has turned into a piece of shit inside 18 months. Go great for a year, then shit the bed. I'm done with them.
I've got both, and both start every time. Only real difference I see is that my husq is a commercial saw made for day in and day out cutting and the Stihl is just your typical "homeowners" grade. I do notice that the "homeowners" grade Husqs seem to have a harder time being reliable.
I've heard this from many people, but personally, I'm done with them. From not starting to ruptured fuel lines to oilers not oiling to burning up spark plugs (for some reason), I'm just finished with them.
assateague wrote:Eric Haynes wrote:assateague wrote:The tank may be cracked now, but yes, it had gas in it. Seriously, every Husky I've owned has turned into a piece of shit inside 18 months. Go great for a year, then shit the bed. I'm done with them.
I've got both, and both start every time. Only real difference I see is that my husq is a commercial saw made for day in and day out cutting and the Stihl is just your typical "homeowners" grade. I do notice that the "homeowners" grade Husqs seem to have a harder time being reliable.
I've heard this from many people, but personally, I'm done with them. From not starting to ruptured fuel lines to oilers not oiling to burning up spark plugs (for some reason), I'm just finished with them.
assateague wrote:I gotta be honest, at identical price points, it's going to be difficult for me to go with the Dolmar over the Stihl, particularly when I have many Stihl dealers around but only one Dolmar. What was the differentiator for you?
assateague wrote:I just don't think I'd use it enough to justify it. Truthfully, a lot of the problems I have are (I bet) from the saw sitting for 8 months a year, and I suspect I'd run into the same issues with a pro-grade saw. Every time I get one, I tell myself I'm going to make a point of running it every month, even if only for an hour or so, but I never do. Hell, there's not enough hours in the day for all the irons I've got in the fire right now. I try to do what I can, which is mostly just using ethanol free gas in all my small motors. It'd just make me cuss even louder, and the blood pressure go up that much more if I couldn't get a $600 saw to start as it does with a $400 saw.
this^BrewGUN wrote:Assa , you may have answered this before, but do you run non-ethanol gas in your small engines?
jehler wrote:I'll give ya 50 for your old saw
assateague wrote: I try to do what I can, which is mostly just using ethanol free gas in all my small motors.
AKPirate wrote:Jason is usually right but sometimes wrong
BrewGUN wrote:Must just be you, my 25 year old husky runs like a dream. Fuel lines needs to be replaced on any saw. General maintenance is different from "breaking". Either that or you keep getting lemons.
assateague wrote:I just don't think I'd use it enough to justify it. Truthfully, a lot of the problems I have are (I bet) from the saw sitting for 8 months a year, and I suspect I'd run into the same issues with a pro-grade saw. Every time I get one, I tell myself I'm going to make a point of running it every month, even if only for an hour or so, but I never do. Hell, there's not enough hours in the day for all the irons I've got in the fire right now. I try to do what I can, which is mostly just using ethanol free gas in all my small motors. It'd just make me cuss even louder, and the blood pressure go up that much more if I couldn't get a $600 saw to start as it does with a $400 saw.
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