I have a Greenworks cordless lawnmower and cordless weedeater for about 10 years and they still serve. Also my yard is small.CHEERS from Canadian Westcoast!
I bought the Greenworks lawnmower, string trimmer and pole saw almost 12 years ago I think. I still have them and they all work great except the lawnmower because the metal deck rusted out. Lol Great products, love them!
I have the Greenworks for about 4 to 5 years now and I love it. Nothing has broken yet but like battery tools it isn't as powerful as a gas. I have a push mower and weed eater in that brand too. I love the mower but the weed eater is a bust! I have lots of batteries so I stay with the Greenworks.
Have a WEN 16" and a Greenworks 20", the Greenworks ($250) is leagues more powerful, but for anything but log cuts I prefer the smaller lighter WEN ($100).
I have (2) Kobalt 80-volt 18" Bar Chainsaws and use (2) 5 AH Batteries. Using it on a Southeast LA farm that was devastated by a Hurricane and has been working absolutely great even cutting huge logs and trees. For oil, I like to use Ryobi Bar and chain oil. And NO more pulling and pulling to start a gas-powered chainsaw. My first 80-volt 18" Bar Chain saw with a 5-AH Battery and charger was $400 in Jul 2021. it is still being sold on Lowes website as of 5/26/2024 - I use them on a Southeast LA farm of 18 acres of tall large pine trees that was devastated by a Hurricane with a tornado 10 acres of the property nearly all the trees are down or dead. My chainsaws have been working great even cutting huge logs and trees up to 20"+ logs and it works great. I am also using the 80-volt 10” Pole saw, lawnmower, and Leaf Blower.
I would only use an electric chain saw for limbing or for the cutting of small saplings. We use a brush cutter attachment on our skid steer for small saplings and large brush, but I get the point that the average Joe cannot afford the equipment we have as a very large ranch. God Bless Joe Scott Muddy Dog Ranch
Sorry but you are blaming the saw for the difference in Chains... They are Both the Light Homeowner version - 40v. and really designed for lighter cutting. Neither is going to run for long cutting Hardwoods. That said, Both will do the job around the typical suburban homestead. Now in my personal opinion, from a lifetime dealing with Battery powered equipment, The Badger loses points for not having a clear warning system for Low Battery. ^ No matter which one chooses - For the life of the Battery and the saw - when the saw Warns, or Stops, check the remaining power of the Battery, let it cool and Recharge it before continuing.
I think its no need to stop when you using this. But when batteries become empty, everyone should wait for at least one hour in my opinion to make battery cool. And then charge.
@@stefistefi6069 Time is irrelevant. Temperature is what matters. For this reason the Greenworks Charger incorporates a Cooling fan as well as Temperature detection. I have depleted an 80v Battery on both my Greenworks and Cobalt Chainsaws and had no issue with recharging after as little as 15 minutes rest. *I also do not overload my chainsaws. Keep the chains sharp and let the saw do the work.
I have the 80V Kobalt chainsaw same as the 80V Greenworks except battery not interchangeable without a little mod. Stay away from Kobalt, they won't fix it or provide parts not even tech support, you only get a refund under the warranty period. After that you're done, its trash. Do not know about Greenworks though. 40V more like for the homeowners, had one exchanged for the 80V.
I have a Greenworks cordless lawnmower and cordless weedeater for about 10 years and they still serve. Also my yard is small.CHEERS from Canadian Westcoast!
I bought the Greenworks lawnmower, string trimmer and pole saw almost 12 years ago I think. I still have them and they all work great except the lawnmower because the metal deck rusted out. Lol Great products, love them!
I have the Greenworks for about 4 to 5 years now and I love it. Nothing has broken yet but like battery tools it isn't as powerful as a gas. I have a push mower and weed eater in that brand too. I love the mower but the weed eater is a bust! I have lots of batteries so I stay with the Greenworks.
Good one .. never heard of Blue Badger but looks good. I have Milwaukee Hatchet but not used it yet :)
Have a WEN 16" and a Greenworks 20", the Greenworks ($250) is leagues more powerful, but for anything but log cuts I prefer the smaller lighter WEN ($100).
I have (2) Kobalt 80-volt 18" Bar Chainsaws and use (2) 5 AH Batteries. Using it on a Southeast LA farm that was devastated by a Hurricane and has been working absolutely great even cutting huge logs and trees. For oil, I like to use Ryobi Bar and chain oil. And NO more pulling and pulling to start a gas-powered chainsaw. My first 80-volt 18" Bar Chain saw with a 5-AH Battery and charger was $400 in Jul 2021. it is still being sold on Lowes website as of 5/26/2024 - I use them on a Southeast LA farm of 18 acres of tall large pine trees that was devastated by a Hurricane with a tornado 10 acres of the property nearly all the trees are down or dead. My chainsaws have been working great even cutting huge logs and trees up to 20"+ logs and it works great. I am also using the 80-volt 10” Pole saw, lawnmower, and Leaf Blower.
I would only use an electric chain saw for limbing or for the cutting of small saplings. We use a brush cutter attachment on our skid steer for small saplings and large brush, but I get the point that the average Joe cannot afford the equipment we have as a very large ranch.
God Bless Joe Scott Muddy Dog Ranch
Sorry but you are blaming the saw for the difference in Chains...
They are Both the Light Homeowner version - 40v. and really designed for lighter cutting. Neither is going to run for long cutting Hardwoods.
That said, Both will do the job around the typical suburban homestead.
Now in my personal opinion, from a lifetime dealing with Battery powered equipment, The Badger loses points for not having a clear warning system for Low Battery.
^ No matter which one chooses - For the life of the Battery and the saw - when the saw Warns, or Stops, check the remaining power of the Battery, let it cool and Recharge it before continuing.
I think its no need to stop when you using this. But when batteries become empty, everyone should wait for at least one hour in my opinion to make battery cool. And then charge.
@@stefistefi6069 Time is irrelevant. Temperature is what matters.
For this reason the Greenworks Charger incorporates a Cooling fan as well as Temperature detection.
I have depleted an 80v Battery on both my Greenworks and Cobalt Chainsaws and had no issue with recharging after as little as 15 minutes rest.
*I also do not overload my chainsaws. Keep the chains sharp and let the saw do the work.
This should be interesring…. 😊
Greenworks 60v 20" and 82v 20" (82CS34) both have more power and will cut faster than a husky 460
👍🍂👍🍁🍁
Keren bro. Mantap
Try the Ego 56v
I went with a DeWalt 18” because I already a a zillion of their batteries. Works well.
LETS see... between those two? ... Id chose the EGO .. smFh
👍😇❤🙏GREAT video Todd!!!
Neither. Milwaukee
Try Ryobi, Milwaukee, DeWalt and compare those against those 2
I have the 80V Kobalt chainsaw same as the 80V Greenworks except battery not interchangeable without a little mod. Stay away from Kobalt, they won't fix it or provide parts not even tech support, you only get a refund under the warranty period. After that you're done, its trash. Do not know about Greenworks though. 40V more like for the homeowners, had one exchanged for the 80V.
Battery saws...cheap crap.
Yup. Battery drills, also cheap crap.
battery better for certain situations, especially for occasional homeowner use (rather than commercial daily stuff)