▲ | potato3732842 a day ago | |||||||||||||
Your electric chain saw weighs a ton for its power output and run time. You'd feel differently if you had to schlep it into the top of a tree all the time. I have an electric chain saw. It overlaps in use with small, but not arborist small, gas saws and excels at some things they don't. While they can all do each other's jobs if you're ok with it being slower/not ideal it's very much a complimentary tool. Where it really excels over gas saws is highly intermittent use, reduced maintenance and increased situational awareness (i.e. you can do stupid things more safely). | ||||||||||||||
▲ | infecto a day ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
You must not be using professional saws then. An electric version of a professional Husqvarna or Stihl (only as an example) with the battery weigh the same as a gas version with gas and oil in the tank. I would argue it’s even more obvious that you have not used one or at least in a professional capacity as you are still looking at 90-100dB running an electric chainsaw. | ||||||||||||||
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▲ | bluGill a day ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
The pros I know have lift trucks and so don't schlep it up trees. I've seen videos of tree climbing, that looks too dangerious for me anyway. (And most pros agree) i'm not a pro. for me there is no gas adveantage. I don't have the stamina to run a saw all day anyway. |