
Wrong. The 355t was introduced as a pro saw before the X series lineup was introduced at all. Both are pro saws. The x series is just a new marketing hype to better differentiate the pro stuff from lower grade models. Which echo didn’t really do before.
The Echo rep did differentiate it to me, saying that the 2511 was the "only pro top-handle" they offered (err maybe they said "only x series, which is our professional lineup" or some other way of qualifying but they made a point to differentiate it which I thought to be weird...if they have "regular", "pro", and "x" then I don't get how to differentiate pro from regular, nor do I think echo is correlating product-quality to these tiers with remotely the level of product-quality-variance as, say, Stihl)
[*should note I wasn't able to find the email so couldn't quote how the rep phrased it but I remember having to hold-back from replying with something contrarian along the lines of "how can the 355
not be a pro-saw, you've got adverts calling it your 'Crowning Achievement'?" but didn't because I've found the "pro/non-pro" distinctions in the chainsaw world to be confusing & sometimes almost random for instance this very case of 355//2511 being 'different tiers' would be an example imo]
X=betterer
Like the X in XS
LOL! Would actually be cool if a company did actually do "consumer&pro" offerings, wouldn't be that hard production-wise to just have like 5 or 20 parts that're upgraded from pot-metal to magnesium or similar upgrades so people can choose the 355X for $400 or a 355L for $300[or whatever #'s]
Hell with Stihl, I'd got a 194t thinking it was "Pro", I mean it's a medium-displacement top-handle and one of the 3 they offer(with top-handles being
almost-inherently "professional" in nature) so I'd
assumed their 3 climb-saws(low, medium & high displacement offerings just like echo/etc) were all pro-saws I mean a pro doesn't always want an 8lbs/2+HP saw it isn't always the optimal many times the 2511/150t is the optimal, was blown away at the level of quality that $$ got with Stihl(and went and got my 355t with that same $$, to the penny actually..)
Will say that I don't get why see-through reservoirs (and quarter-turn caps) aren't ubiquitous, I'd initially thought maybe Stihl had some patent but that'd seem like a shaky patent as viewable-reservoirs have been around for ages, but now I notice my Husq blower has see-through(err, now I
realize ;P) so am left wondering how any saws are omitting it if they're 'pro tier', I'd take viewable reservoirs over the swap from clamshell all day!!
2511 uses a 3-piece engine while 355 is 2-piece “clamshell”. Theoretically this is the element which permits calling it “non professional”.
However, the more expensive competition in that class also uses homeowner class cylinders and nobody cares about “professional” purity as long as the machines are able to serve the purpose.
For Echo X series doesn’t mean its just professional - it means one or more leading features in that class (power and/or weight and/or cutting performance). Basically all X’es are pro units, but not all pro units are X’es. 355 is an example of that.
Yeah this is what I have heard.....but I've also heard the sentiment of "it doesn't frickin' matter"....so, as someone who couldn't have told you beforehand whether clamshell, or 3-piece, was superior, could someone explain to me why I'd prefer my 355 to be 3-piece? Is it so I could do porting work, and the 3-piece is synonymous with "long block" so it eliminates changing compression? If so then that'd be of
zero significance/consequence to me, if I personally knew someone who did porting then sure maybe I'd get work done but I, like almost anyone buying these saws, am not going to be getting porting work done....there's gotta be more to the superiority of 3-pieces than "can modify them further", right?
(*will say I've read comments of people seemingly-surprised the 355 has a chrome, domed piston...is that not always a thing? But have also heard hesitant "it's probably fine" comments Re the single-ring on the piston..)
Mine’s been truckin along like a pro for years
I don't know any non pros that buy a top handle saw. Plenty of Echo's in use by pros here.
I spent a LONG time researching this, I'd already had a 25cc & 32cc climb-saws but my 32cc/16" left me feeling like I 'needed' a top-tier, >2HP unit (yknow, so I can feel more pro ;P ) but it wasn't a practical need so had the time to research it and that ^^^^ sentiment you guys voice is almost universal. There is a user "PGG" or "PGC" or similar either on here or arboristsite who goes to all the echo threads and makes insane negative comments (for instance calling them heavy, when weights are known-quantities and echo is in-line w/ its displacement&HP so far as product-weight) but aside from that *single* user, who **hated** echo with an obnoxious passion(and whose account is banned) there simply weren't complaint-threads or 'known issues' or anything just anecdote after anecdote of people singing-praises (and, oddly, there's typically almost a hesitation, like "
surprisingly they've lasted so long" or "
for a 5yr old saw / for a $400 tool..." but then nothing but praises..)
I suspect lithium will be turning the sub-30cc world (and sub-40cc soon enough) on its head shortly enough but for petrol units I couldn't imagine paying 2X the price to go from a 355t to a 201 or a 540, or paying a 50% premium to get the inferior 150t over the 2511t (and would argue that the pair of 355t + 2511t is all one needs for top-handles, if not going lithium!)
[off-topic but Re echo-quality, I acquired a snapped-in-half echo ppt266 (MSRP $600, 25cc extendable polesaw loop-handle ~14' tall unit) and rebuilt it and its engine is the smoothest 2-stroke I've ever used (by a large margin actually), as well as being my only chainsaw that "feels" like it has more power than its displacement should be giving it, ie it cuts like I'd expect a 30cc would cut and that's
not the case on any of my other saws even my poulan pro 42cc outperforms my 36cc Echo 355t..all my units seem in-line w/ their displacement except this polesaw, it cuts closer to my 32cc than my 25cc climb-saws!]