JeffWischer
Well-Known OPE Member
- Local time
- 2:06 PM
- User ID
- 32428
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2025
- Messages
- 62
- Reaction score
- 158
- Location
- Lincolnshire, IL

Maybe we can have a little fun...
So got into this "hobby" getting my 2002 H-350 back to tip-top shape. Thanks again to Hacskaroly and all the others that helped- and Matt Olson for sure! And then the two Craftsman/Poulans, and the Jonsered "easier-start" conversion. Ended up with quite a few parts from Amazon.
And now the Amazon AI shows me chainsaws and related things out the proverbial wazoo. Including a bewildering number of very "inexpensive" Chinese saws. I'm curious what folks know about these. Anyone buy one? Say for instance, to leave at the hunting/fishing cabin/shack, and if it's stolen during an off-season break-in you're not mourning the loss of a 455 Rancher. You get the idea. Allow me a few bullet points to maybe summarize the obvious...
- Features: the really cheap ones appear to be very typical of "name brand" saws from the last century. Not necessarily bad, for the price- we all cut a lot of wood with them in our younger days.
- Build quality/metallurgy: some mention 25:1 oil mix. Is this due to wider tolerances, less durable cylinder and piston material? Not a chrome plated cylinder? One I looked at specifically mentioned recently upgraded quality steel in the chain(s); not difficult to guess why!
- It's fun (maybe?!) to compare the (my terms) Chinese English, Chinese kinda-sorta English, and occasionally Chinese not-quite English...
- Parts: non-existant? Is it possible to know that some are clones of established brands (higher-end Chinese, or others) and thereby find "equivalent" parts? And hope they fit?
Warranty: Again, are they throw-away saws?
Made-in-China Brands that I see at the Big Box stores: Craftsman at Lowes, Troy-Bilt at Menard's, et cetera: Where do they fit in this picture, or not?
I have enough chainsaws for the rest of my lifetime, and maybe those of my two sons as well. But some of them look kinda cool...
So got into this "hobby" getting my 2002 H-350 back to tip-top shape. Thanks again to Hacskaroly and all the others that helped- and Matt Olson for sure! And then the two Craftsman/Poulans, and the Jonsered "easier-start" conversion. Ended up with quite a few parts from Amazon.
And now the Amazon AI shows me chainsaws and related things out the proverbial wazoo. Including a bewildering number of very "inexpensive" Chinese saws. I'm curious what folks know about these. Anyone buy one? Say for instance, to leave at the hunting/fishing cabin/shack, and if it's stolen during an off-season break-in you're not mourning the loss of a 455 Rancher. You get the idea. Allow me a few bullet points to maybe summarize the obvious...
- Features: the really cheap ones appear to be very typical of "name brand" saws from the last century. Not necessarily bad, for the price- we all cut a lot of wood with them in our younger days.
- Build quality/metallurgy: some mention 25:1 oil mix. Is this due to wider tolerances, less durable cylinder and piston material? Not a chrome plated cylinder? One I looked at specifically mentioned recently upgraded quality steel in the chain(s); not difficult to guess why!
- It's fun (maybe?!) to compare the (my terms) Chinese English, Chinese kinda-sorta English, and occasionally Chinese not-quite English...
- Parts: non-existant? Is it possible to know that some are clones of established brands (higher-end Chinese, or others) and thereby find "equivalent" parts? And hope they fit?
Warranty: Again, are they throw-away saws?
Made-in-China Brands that I see at the Big Box stores: Craftsman at Lowes, Troy-Bilt at Menard's, et cetera: Where do they fit in this picture, or not?
I have enough chainsaws for the rest of my lifetime, and maybe those of my two sons as well. But some of them look kinda cool...