Todd n Natalie
OverCamper
Beat me to it.Umm... aren’t all chain saws portable?
Beat me to it.Umm... aren’t all chain saws portable?
Reminds me of the helicopter saw from a James Bond movie:Everything is relative
Helicopter Chainsaw Trimming Trees Next to Power Lines
Occurred on August 8, 2019 / Crivitz, Wisconsin, USA Info From Licensor: Today was awesome, the guys doing the tree trimming with the helicopter allowed me to mount a GoPro to the helicopter to recordrumble.com
In our last 140,000 Km overland we've had to cut up trees across the road only four times.
"Bow saws don't take up much space" - you're usually carrying other stuff and every item contributes to the overall space and weight. The "wire saw" is a tenth of the weight and 100th of the space required (guessing at these ratios, however even if they're not quite right, the "wire saw" is a lot lighter and smaller... On a risk basis, carrying a bow saw to reduce the time to cut up the trees would have been a poor investment in space, weight, and cost.
"Bow saws don't take up much space" - you're usually carrying other stuff and every item contributes to the overall space and weight. The "wire saw" is a tenth of the weight and 100th of the space required (guessing at these ratios, however even if they're not quite right, the "wire saw" is a lot lighter and smaller...). In our last 140,000 Km overland we've had to cut up trees across the road only four times (actually five, however there was already someone there with a powered chain saw, so we just observed/applauded). On a risk basis, carrying a bow saw to reduce the time to cut up the trees would have been a poor investment in space, weight, and cost.
Absolutely. In our "big trips" (about 150,000 Km so far) we've had to cut up trees across the track four times: once in Misiones Province, Argentina, 3 times in Nyika Plateau, Malawi (on one track). We've also had our route blocked once on the Osa Peninsula, Costa Rica, however by the time we arrived someone else was sorting it out with a chain saw - our wire saw would not have handled this. I've also had to deal with fallen trees in Congo, and had a machete at the time - the wire saw would have worked, although it would have taken somewhat longer... So (including only the "big trips") we have needed a wire saw less than once every 40,000 Km. Overall (47 years travelling in "interesting" places) we have needed to cut up trees only half a dozen times; and we would have needed something more than a wire saw only once... I've driven a lot of forestry roads in North America and never had to deal with a fallen tree - please keep trailblazing for us.I could not travel 500km in spring on about half the forest roads in North America w/o cutting 20 trees. I have never gone on a multi day trip anywhere that is forested and not had to saw something down or pull something off the trail with the vehicle at least once. I guess its all relative to where you travel.
How is that any different than a traditional bow saw?Fwiw, great saw but sucks. Triangular frame seriously limits usefulness cutting larger diameter piece.