Phil
Carpal tunnel level member
- Location
- Oak Lawn, IL
Discussion on the larger battery ground saws that are out.
We have the Stihl MSA 300C with 20" bar at work. I don't much care for all the button time outs when using it. Takes a special big battery to get full power. Looks cool though
I got my hands on the Milwaukee dual battery saw and have been putting the screws to it. I use it for everything except obviously bigger trees that are beyond its battery life to efficiently do, but I do try to avoid gas saws as much as possible right now to bench mark work load achievable without having a truck load of batteries to keep swapping out. I run it with 2 of the 8.0 forge which came with it then swap to a 12.0 forge with another 8.0 forge cus that's all I have. If I'm hauling ass in the woods I will run all four batteries out by 9:00 - 9:30 but get like 6-7 trees down and bucked/limbed/stumped. It has two power settings and I leave it on the lower of the two. It does have some heft to it when you pick it up but once working I don't notice it much. It does have a slower chain speed so I need to be careful in the smaller, whippy understory stuff I cut so it doesn't throw the chain. That's not an issue if in a true urban setting just cutting solid wood. So far, this thing rips. I borecut no problem. I really wish it had a full chisel, non reduced kickback chain for more cutting aggression though. If I'm close enough to the shop I'll stop in for lunch and throw two batteries on the supercharger. They are fully charged by the time I'm done which effectively gives me 6 batteries on the day. If I was working at a private residence, I would bring the supercharger in the field with me and plug it in to an outside power source at the client's property. I think with 6 batteries and a supercharger on site, you'd be hard pressed to run out of juice in the rotation.
Anybody running battery ground saws with any regularity on actual job sites? The only tests I see on YouTube are people just cutting cookies and timing it. Doesn't really give a real world stress test. I think I saw one video where an entire job was done with just battery saws.
We have the Stihl MSA 300C with 20" bar at work. I don't much care for all the button time outs when using it. Takes a special big battery to get full power. Looks cool though
I got my hands on the Milwaukee dual battery saw and have been putting the screws to it. I use it for everything except obviously bigger trees that are beyond its battery life to efficiently do, but I do try to avoid gas saws as much as possible right now to bench mark work load achievable without having a truck load of batteries to keep swapping out. I run it with 2 of the 8.0 forge which came with it then swap to a 12.0 forge with another 8.0 forge cus that's all I have. If I'm hauling ass in the woods I will run all four batteries out by 9:00 - 9:30 but get like 6-7 trees down and bucked/limbed/stumped. It has two power settings and I leave it on the lower of the two. It does have some heft to it when you pick it up but once working I don't notice it much. It does have a slower chain speed so I need to be careful in the smaller, whippy understory stuff I cut so it doesn't throw the chain. That's not an issue if in a true urban setting just cutting solid wood. So far, this thing rips. I borecut no problem. I really wish it had a full chisel, non reduced kickback chain for more cutting aggression though. If I'm close enough to the shop I'll stop in for lunch and throw two batteries on the supercharger. They are fully charged by the time I'm done which effectively gives me 6 batteries on the day. If I was working at a private residence, I would bring the supercharger in the field with me and plug it in to an outside power source at the client's property. I think with 6 batteries and a supercharger on site, you'd be hard pressed to run out of juice in the rotation.
Anybody running battery ground saws with any regularity on actual job sites? The only tests I see on YouTube are people just cutting cookies and timing it. Doesn't really give a real world stress test. I think I saw one video where an entire job was done with just battery saws.
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