Patandsam wrote:We finally got a chain saw at a auction but it has no instructions or chain. It goes fine but we havent used it because it still needs a chain which we can get of Ebay. Can someone explain for dummies about oil. It seems there are three different ones and a guy at the auction said they need two different oils, one goes somewhere in the motor. We only seem to have one oil container on it for oil and cant see any sort of hole where you would squirt more in the motor. Do they need two oils and as theres only one container are you supposed to mix them together? There is chainsaw oil, biological oil and another sort called fifty to one. If we only have one oil container which should we use please, or do you mix them up. If its best we would prefer the biological one as it seems to be natural.
Patandsam wrote:If you read the posts Davetb you will realise that we have stated the make and model...
Patandsam wrote:I'll bet there are plenty of practical things women do well that you are unfamiliar with like cleaning toilets, cooking, ironing and giving birth, so a little bit of respect for us might be nice rather than suggesting we are scary with tools. That is rather patronising.
Patandsam wrote:I would have thought generally that electric saws are more popular than petrol ones, there are 14 electric ones on the Tesco website and only 2 petrol ones...
Patandsam wrote:If it was so important to go on an expensive course for an electric saw and its dangerous why dont the shops offer courses or safety advice and should there be some legal requirement to have some training before you get one?
Patandsam wrote:Are the cordless ones any good Simon?
Patandsam wrote:Maybe we could get one on Ebay or from Tesco and do without trailing half a mile of wire across the place.
Patandsam wrote:If you read the posts Davetb you will realise that we have stated the make and model and we didnt say we were getting trained, that was someone else. We dont know why you think our question is scary, it seems perfectly sensible to ask for advice if puzzled by lots of different products which may or may not be right for the chain saw. Normally we get our vehicles serviced at the garage and the groundsman did the oil in the other things we use, so are not very familiar with different machine oils. I'll bet there are plenty of practical things women do well that you are unfamiliar with like cleaning toilets, cooking, ironing and giving birth, so a little bit of respect for us might be nice rather than suggesting we are scary with tools. That is rather patronising.
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