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No clue. Just saw it and shared. I may have to dig a little deeper?Nice !
How much ?
Bet you could make an attachment to do so easily. Even easier being its you.Can't split a case with that.
I noticed that also. Recently I added another Husky to my collection -- a 350 with a few hiccups that I think I can fix. Cosmetically, it was in mint condition. $155 shipped to my doorstep, I have found these and the 353 to be really nice firewood saws with fabulous fuel economy.How ironic they have a Husqvarna on there.
I had a 2150 and was jazzed up and yeah little screamer. Slap a metal clamp on that boot. And if we looked in my garage the saws with an H stamped on them out number the creamsickles 3 to 1 I just felt like stirring the pot!!I noticed that also. Recently I added another Husky to my collection -- a 350 with a few hiccups that I think I can fix. Cosmetically, it was in mint condition. $155 shipped to my doorstep, I have found these and the 353 to be really nice firewood saws with fabulous fuel economy.
I have to agree. Most of the time all you need is the saw to be held securely in place while you work on it, sharpening the chain, cleaning the carb, etc . A vise or clamp that grips the bar can do this:It is sort of neat but... What would be the advantage of it over a much more compact bar mount style one? Tuning? I can't quite picture a practical use for it and wouldn't want it taking up valuable bench space.
I was thinking the same thing. I guess all the ingenious inventors still buy quality saws.How ironic they have a husqvarna on there.