Get the ms170 they are 200 give or take stihl dealers are everywhere so parts are readily available. Use the stihl fuel or 50/ fuel , it is expensive around 10$ per quart but the can is sealed , high octane ,ethanol free ,premixed and will greatly extend the useable life of the saw. I use my saws year-round and swear by the factory mixed fuel. Nothing worse than a saw that won't run when you need it. I have two 170 stihl saws one is around 14 years old and still going strong
Sawzall with an assortment of blades. One of the best purchases I've made
You can't pick out one consumer grade farm saw and say Husky is weak. To say the ones you have seen would not start is also a fetch because who knows who or if the carb was tuned and how old the gas was? Personally I run the little Husky race horse 346xp. It's small and light and will wip anything in its size or even a lot larger like the farm boss. You must compair fairly because both brands offer consumer, mid grade and professional saws. Unfortunately you must research and read between the lines to find out what's what. Stile does the same thing. You get what you pay for but looking for the ones without the rubber priming ball or some easy start features is a way to start. I also keep a Poland around and have dealt with my dads Crafstman. All they need is a lot of oil in the gas and a real tune. Open up the muffler a little without hurting the screen and mod the carb so you can tune it. It will start on first pull and feel like twice the power. I love tweaking cheap saws because they respond so well. As said that $10 a quart gas is a bargain if you want it to start next year. I run the AV gas which is basically the same stuff and it's wonderfull. Two strokes hate alcohol and love octane.gonna have to stick with Sthil on this one.
I have a ms290 that I run a 20 inch bar on. I got it for a killer deal from the dealer because some one had come in the weekend before and run it for a few hours and said it was too heavy..... hmmmm
Needless to say the dealer made sure it was all kosher and knocked a hundred bucks off it since they were just going to end up useing it as their demo saw.
I have been using that saw extensivly to heat my house and clear land for the last three years. Put gas and oil in it, change the airfilter and it just goes.
Every time I pick up a husky I find my self doing battle to start it and keep it running. ( poor keeping on all those saw owners I am sure. ) I just find that the power to size ratio on the husky to be underwhelming. For ex... The 290 farm boss vs the husky rancher is not even close in my book. Perhaps others have other experiences. I have had the same problem with their smaller saws. I have never used a pro grade husky that was taken care of so I wont hold that aganist the saw. I can say that any of Sthil's pro saws are amazing machines that are worth every cent.
Again, Run far far away from any of the cheaper stuff unless you want to spend tim messing with it and paying for it. The polans craftsmans etc are all designed to be used for light duty every once a while but go try and clear a 20 inch tree off the road and you will find them lacking. I admit the older ones( like 15 years back) are much better then the current offerings.
Good luck
You can't pick out one consumer grade farm saw and say Husky is weak. To say the ones you have seen would not start is also a fetch because who knows who or if the carb was tuned and how old the gas was? Personally I run the little Husky race horse 346xp. It's small and light and will wip anything in its size or even a lot larger like the farm boss. You must compair fairly because both brands offer consumer, mid grade and professional saws. Unfortunately you must research and read between the lines to find out what's what. Stile does the same thing. You get what you pay for but looking for the ones without the rubber priming ball or some easy start features is a way to start. I also keep a Poland around and have dealt with my dads Crafstman. All they need is a lot of oil in the gas and a real tune. Open up the muffler a little without hurting the screen and mod the carb so you can tune it. It will start on first pull and feel like twice the power. I love tweaking cheap saws because they respond so well. As said that $10 a quart gas is a bargain if you want it to start next year. I run the AV gas which is basically the same stuff and it's wonderfull. Two strokes hate alcohol and love octane.
Spend the money on either pro grade offerings and have a great easy to tune and maintain saw for life. The pro grades get real carbs for starters and have pistons ,rings and bearing made to run for ever. Pay once or buy a new saw every few years.
http://www.husqvarna.com/us/forest/products/xp-saws/346-xp-g/