High Quality Chainsaw Bars Husqvarna Toys Hockfire Saws

RD Powersports

jacob j.

Only the weird
Staff member
GoldMember
Yearly GoldMember
Local time
10:07 PM
User ID
232
Joined
Dec 24, 2015
Messages
9,743
Reaction score
67,061
Location
Coastal Oregon
Country flag
Seems like everyone is getting into the "performance saw" business these days.

Is there really that much money in it?
 

jacob j.

Only the weird
Staff member
GoldMember
Yearly GoldMember
Local time
10:07 PM
User ID
232
Joined
Dec 24, 2015
Messages
9,743
Reaction score
67,061
Location
Coastal Oregon
Country flag
I was thinking about getting some spinners for my saws, maybe a lift kit.... 🤣
Nice! If I get these glointhedark spikes I can find my saw at night 😃
View attachment 484070

I know, not as cool as LED Spinna’s synced to your 6,000w sound system, but…gotta start somewhere.

I think a lot of it is pretty silly, but I'm actually interested in the economics of it. I go to some of the websites of these products and many will be listed as "sold out", which implies there's a decent demand for them. I think I would trust going to a builder's site most like Jason Egan where he's built/tested/vetted the products and he's a former pro timber faller, so he knows what works.

Anyway, back to Jake's question - I have very little experience with any of these products so hopefully someone with more experience can chime in.
 

singinwoodwackr

Pinnacle OPE Member
Yearly GoldMember
Local time
11:07 PM
User ID
34279
Joined
Sep 14, 2025
Messages
808
Reaction score
2,414
Location
moon
Country flag
I think a lot of it is pretty silly, but I'm actually interested in the economics of it. I go to some of the websites of these products and many will be listed as "sold out", which implies there's a decent demand for them. I think I would trust going to a builder's site most like Jason Egan where he's built/tested/vetted the products and he's a former pro timber faller, so he knows what works.

Anyway, back to Jake's question - I have very little experience with any of these products so hopefully someone with more experience can chime in.
O come on…you know you want a bling saw…just admit it.
🤣
 

jacob j.

Only the weird
Staff member
GoldMember
Yearly GoldMember
Local time
10:07 PM
User ID
232
Joined
Dec 24, 2015
Messages
9,743
Reaction score
67,061
Location
Coastal Oregon
Country flag
O come on…you know you want a bling saw…just admit it.
🤣
Guilty for sure...I was buying the Pro Safety stuff and Eliminator air filter kits way back when...I remember when Max-Flow was called "Holeshot" and that was the bling to have.
 

Woodslasher

Teh debil
Local time
10:07 PM
User ID
15993
Joined
Mar 18, 2021
Messages
3,736
Reaction score
15,293
Location
Commiefornia
Country flag
I think a lot of it is pretty silly, but I'm actually interested in the economics of it. I go to some of the websites of these products and many will be listed as "sold out", which implies there's a decent demand for them.
Think of all the bed stacks, stupid wheels, tuners, chips, spinny-fasty turbos, etc for diesel trucks. Snap-on tools for all the new 18yr old techs who're driving a clapped out 96 Accord or bumming a ride but have $47k in tools on payment plans that'll keep them broke till they're 60. It's a status symbol, the new logger kid can earn the old guys' respect by having a Rip Snort Powersport saw that's at least 40x better than the old guy's stock saw. It's got CNC parts, fer cryin out loud! That's also why the average retirement savings is $998, but retirement's a long ways away and they really need those status symbols now!

Partially sarcasm, but also backed by truth. At a local shop I'll hear how the techs who either should be planning for their future or are struggling now are looking at getting a $10k tool box on payment plans when they have the same thing but it's 3 years old. Or they buy some new chingus that they might use once a year because it's Snap-On and was on sale for $250 instead of $350. It's part of a societal shift, instead of just getting what you can afford get a credit card and worry about it later! My generation typically does not plan for the future, might plan for the present, and has no concept of the issues/dangers of assuming too much debt.
 
Top