SU2
Omono
I use the Dewalt 20v. It’s great. Two pieces of advice:
Scott
- Listen to Zach and buy the 12” pruning blades.
- You’ll need a lot of extra batteries. The ones the Dewalt comes with in the box are 1.5 Ah and don’t last nearly long enough. But you can buy premium 5Ah batteries that have some staying power. They’re expensive, but absolutely worth it. I go in the field with two of the 5Ah and four of the 1.5 Ah batteries. Nothing stinks more than hauling all your tools and equipment into the field and having your sawzall battery die on the first tree.
Thanks for the advice!!
Re pruning blades, I'll definitely get some I mean if I were in a position where I was collecting a tree today I'd never try w/ 6" blades I'd just borrow the sawzall I always do (w/ 11" blade and twice the amperage! I'd said 9" earlier but was wrong, it's got an 11"), I'm going to go for the root-pruning / trunk styling session on an already-collected bougie with these 6"'s but definitely wouldn't waste time attempting a collection that way!
Re batteries, this is a corded model - I've been lucky enough that most of the trees I've collected thus far have been from yards, so I can run a line for the sawzall, and the few that weren't I just used saws/hatchet and the torque of long-branches (like, leaving the trunk(s) larger than wanted so you can use them for leverage to twist it, then cut them once it's out-of-ground!), and I certainly see the utility of a battery-powered unit for truly-wild trees but, unfortunately and hopefully not for that long, I'm currently unable to go 'wild tree hunting', I've yet to find what trees to go for (ie what trees can handle drastic trunk-chopping at the time of collection), with it being fall now I'm sure my collection-rate isn't going to be what it was, gives me time to figure out what species I can attempt such extreme collections on with some realistic degree of success (for instance, I've never had luck with an Oak, and I've had ones that I was sure they'd had enough roots / foliage to make it, they always die.. I recently went to my first meeting/workshop, and was told that now is actually a good time to collect Oaks in my area, as at the end of the rainy-season they've got the largest fine-root-mass under their trunks than other times of the year, so will likely try another Oak or two before resorting to 2-stepping it ie trenching it one time, collecting another - one way or another I'm getting an Oak, there's no 2 ways about it!!)