Wasn't Poulin named Pioneer about 40 years ago? If so that's actually where I got my start. My grandfather and my dad went in on one. No idea of the model number. It was a bear to start but ran like a raped ape... I was too young to use it much but remember it well...
I just googled it Dave. You're right. They were bought by Husky in 1979 and the name killed off in 1988.... I had my brands mixed up...
Story goes, my grandfather was one of the first in the area to buy a gas powered chainsaw. Really cool that I'm now in possession of that saw. Bought new, a 1959 Pioneer 610.
My co-worker gave me an old Pioneer 28(IIRC...I know I looked it up and its about 50cc) earlier this year...haven't tried to get it running yet, seems to have plenty of compression, so I am hopeful that a little carb work will have it running again...it was his dads and was one of several saws he inherited after the estate sale...he kept the runners...I think there was 1 Stihl and 1 Husky.
I know what you mean, but on Harleys the giant transmission/ primary and cover is on the opposite side as the pipes that run on the right side.
My dad helped my grandfather (his FIL) get firewood with a 2 man cross cut saw. He has fond memories of the work it saved. Definitely a different time! I sure would struggle to heave that 30 pound beastie for a few hours. Given the choice to hand cut/buck a huge log or get used to the Pioneer, I'd become conditioned.
My dad had a homelite zip. Heavy as all get out. No thank you. He later got a mac610. Just as loud and lighter, but still heavy for what it is.
Funny how similar we are. When I was about 15 or so, daddy had the Homelite Super Wiz 55, with big bow blade, built like a tank and just as heavy. In 1980, he got a Mobile Dimension portable sawmill, I was 17, just out of high school and he got a ProMac 610, with a bow, I cut qiute a few trees for the mill with it. That saw got hung on a nail in the back of his shop for at least 25 yrs. I brought it to Dennis' GTG in '19 and gave it to Armbru84 ... He had it running a couple weeks later...
Here's a mint zip, or zip 2. 18 lbs 7 oz, power head only. Granted I was like 13 or so, and not even allowed to run a chainsaw at that time, but I picked it up once. That's a lot of weight for only 3.6 hp. Any modern 50cc saw weighs 2/3 of that and has more power.
Tonight I ordered a Tsumura Light 16" bar, a pair of Oregon EXL chains and a scabbard for that setup. The 261 got it's Halloween candy....
I’m out in the woods with it now boys. I am quite happy with my economic stimulus so far. I’m also glad I ordered a lightweight 16” bar for it. The 20 works ok but makes the saw pretty unbalanced and nose heavy. It will also bog if you push it. I think once I have a proper bar on it and it gets broken in, it will be my new weapon of choice… Todays project is dropping beech to continue to work towards a view behind our home… nothing big or exciting but good break in work for the 261…