(Dis)Advantages to using battery powered chainsaws

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Now I present for you critique my tool situation.
First, too much information. When we bought our present home in New Orleans it was three weeks before Hurricane Katrina. I had a pretty good collection of tools as a small electrical contractor but now everything I owned was under 8' of salt & chemical laden sewage. (When I tried to clean my hand tools months later, they had been soaked in diesel and then clean water. When I scrubbed them and laid them in the grass, blowflies started landing on them! :rolleyes:) I didn't NEED many tools because I was now an RN. Except I had a house to rebuild from the framing and subfloor up. (I promise it will move faster from here.)
Two of my favorite power tools I bought to rebuild were a Skillsaw wormdrive cirular saw, and a Milwaukee M-18 cordless drill motor. When I broke them out recently to build a new coop in the backyard, neither worked. Confused and a little brokenhearted (I didn't think I would have to buy these tools again) I cut the frayed and patched cord and installed a new male plug without success. No broken wires in the handle. I even removed and cleaned the brushes and the motor wasn't frozen. Question, Would you try to have it repaired, get a new one, or go battery?
The drill motor, I THINK has a bad charger but I haven't had a way to test. (In the middle of the build when cash and time was of the essence, I had a chance to buy a M-18 circular saw for $200, not much more than just the battery charger set. I passed and they were gone the next day. :he) I see now I can get a charger for @$30 on Amazon.
I am open to any suggestions.
If you have a repair tech/shop you trust it might be worth having them inspected. It's strange that both aren't working.

We bought a corded circular saw about 8 years ago, rarely use it but kept it inside the house. I wonder if it would still work if we'd stored it in the shed, in an outside environment of dust and dirt?

I am now keeping it in the shed, but in a large plastic tote with a tight lid, along with my recently purchased handheld grinder and metal shears (both corded).

What I like about my cordless tools is the weight, or lack thereof. I'm an older woman, small in stature, and with arthritis. If I had to handle the weight of that circular saw for more than a minute here and there I'd be in a lot of pain. My Milwaukee drill is a little workhorse, and got me through my hoop coop construction with little to no pain.

I am now purchasing outdoor cordless tools because I can get yard maintenance done without requiring upper body strength and young joints. I found a new reciprocating saw on eBay, bit the bullet and bought it. I think it will be worth the investment.
 
The new battery impact drills compete very closely with corded drills. No they can't hold a candle to a corded hilti hammer drill but how often do you need that. I'm a makita fan but the 12 volt Dewalt impact drill that work bought was impressive. I prefer the smaller volt drills just cause of weight. I'm not one of those guys that have to prove thier manliness by buying the largest volt drill possible.
 
You also have to think about your location. There's a chance that it may need to be used without land power. Yeah a corded tool can be used off a generator but do you want to waste power in that scenario? Keep the batteries and chainsaw gas topped off
 
I live in Argentina. So all I see is mining companies poisoning our water and soil, so someone can cut a tree down over three days.
Sorry. Most people don't look at the unintended conquences. Wait until the try to push "electric cars and 'clean' energy" down every one's crop. I watched all that 'green energy' come down the Mississippi River in coal barges every day for years.
 
Sorry. Most people don't look at the unintended conquences. Wait until the try to push "electric cars and 'clean' energy" down every one's crop. I watched all that 'green energy' come down the Mississippi River in coal barges every day for years.
Watch what happens to the power grid when half the people in California plug in their electric cars to charge.
 
I cannot start the Stihl - neither can anyone else except my brother-in-law, who is a logger. I have switched almost everything (trimmer, whacker, chainsaw) to battery-powered. It is just easier. And I don't see why, with our technology now, the used batteries can't be shipped off into space, where they will not harm this planet, or anything else...especially if they are on a one-way trip to the Sun.:idunno
:idunno:idunno
 

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