I remember someone met and talked to Gunnar Hansen in person for an autograph and asked him what chainsaw did he used, Gunnar Hansen got annoyed and corrected so many people, gunnar hansen said himself that he clearly didnt used 245a chainsaw, he used 306a chainsaw with 245a part top cover on it.
He was wrong. preview.redd.it/py3dfxtp9vj81.jpg?width=2400&format=pjpg&auto=webp&v=enabled&s=57b3228bc549b57020fe5da752a72418b60dc819 Zoom in and you can see the cursive "Two Forty Five" script, which is far different from the 306 script. There is no way they changed the tank AND the sticker. This movie was basically made by college students with no money. Why on God's green earth would they modify a 306 to that extent when they could just buy a 245a?
He even wrote it in his book it was a 306 with 245 parts. I also read somewhere they borrowed the saw from a farmer. So maybe he converted with better parts from a 245. Who knows
@@The.jokes.on.you1997 the tops can be changed. There's like 4 different chainsaws made by poulan that look identical with some slight differences. The 306 and 245 (apart from internal differences) the tank and filter (black parts on top) can be interchanged freely. If you read the comments you wouldn't have even typed that.
Actually, yes. It is correct, the chainsaw Gunnar Hansen's Leatherface used was the Poulan 245A. Mainly because the Poulan 245A typically featured a smaller engine compared to the 306A and generally the 306A had a larger engine, providing more power for cutting tasks. This made it more suitable for heavy-duty or professional use. Meanwhile the 245A was more lightweight and compact chainsaw, suitable for lighter tasks and easier maneuverability. Also by the fact that the Poulan 245A was likely produced in the 1960s and 1970s and it was one of the most selled chainsaw models, even after it got popularity thanks to the 1974 TCM film.
The saw used was a Poulan 223. The giveaways are the fact they used electrical tape on one strip of the clutch cover, directly in the center. On the 223, the only printing on the clutch cover is the word poulan. On the 306a and 245 a, it has a different poulan font that at the top portion of the clutch cover circle, and in the middle in white either says 306a or 245a. In the film, only the middle has tape and there's no other lettering on the clutch cover. This is a giveaway that the clutch cover belongs to the 223 model. The 223 models also have the same handles and the same air filter top as the 245a which may be confusing while first looking. The other giveaway that it is a 223 is the Powersharp knob which you can see in the film. It ONLY existed on the 223!
Not definitive enough. The 223 had several style switch combinations. Some had the decompression style and the later ones had a switch just like the 245. So YES discussion case not closed. @@krshr39
I talked with bill moseley (chop top) and he saw the real saw used in the first movie and he told me it was a frankenstein between both saws. No one but whoever got the actual saw knows but the og saw does have both 245a and 306a parts on the outside. To me i think it was a saw that had a lot of real working hours and needed cheap replacement parts.
love the video and the channel, I recently found out the actor who played leatherface in the 74 film wrote a book, and in the book he said it was a previously owned 306a that was modified. this is something you can tell because on the top of the chainsaw you can see that the 245a parts have different amounts of weathering.
I should have drilled down on this harder in the video. I know about the actor making this claim...but I literally do not believe him. Been on too many film shoots. What I believe to have happened is that he was on some scale caught making a false statement by accident. Like maybe...somewhere he saw a 306 and recognized it (incorrectly) as his saw. Then in some situation he said the saw used was a 306, but then was proven wrong by the different gas tank and muffler. So then, as I have seen millions of times, the story becomes a conglomeration of fact and fiction. It definitely was a farmers saw, and to save face, he made up the modified bit. Put on your critical thinking hat...in 1974, what farmer would have taken a brand new Poulan 306 and modified it with a 245 fuel tank and muffler? None. It would not have happened. The actor is lying. And over the years, he told the story so often that it became reality in his brain, and there was no one who could correct him. That chainsaw in the movie is a 245.
I respectfully disagree good sir. First off the dude that was there has to have dibs on the most credit. The guy that was there we have to start off assuming he knows more about it than we do. Like you said he didn't know anything about saws. So how would he even know they were interchangeable? In his book he said it was a 306 with a 245 tank handle and muffler. If he was telling the truth, it would look exactly like it does in the movie. (and coincidentally those are the exact parts that would've had to been changed for it to look like it does). As you said it was a low budget film. As he said in the book they were trying to avoid a lawsuit from poulan. If they took 2 saws and switched over a few parts to make a Frankensaw and then covered up the poulan logo, it would be harder to sue them for using a specific saw. They got it from a farmer not from a store. Maybe the farmer busted the gas tank on his 4 year old saw and bought the bigger one just for the extra gas storage. To me it boils down to there is nothing about the saw that discredits his story. So I lean towards he was telling the truth. Cuz what's his motivation for lying about it? He didn't just get the models mixed up and then run with it, he specifically said they switched those parts so he would've had to completely make that up and I just don't see why he would do that
I just bought a Poulan 31 from a guy, and he was trying to sell me "the ACTUAL chainsaw Leatherface used, not the one people think he used". Unfortunately I spent all my money on the 31 so I wasn't as interested as I would have been otherwise, so I don't know which model he had. He did have a few dozen old saws so I imagine it was a 245. Hopefully I can raise some money to go shopping through his shed soon.
@@lordpean I didn't. It turns out it was in fact a Poulan 245a, running and in pretty good shape, with a 20" bar. But he was asking $350 for it, then eventually sold it for $200. I never would have been able to afford even $200, but somebody got a good deal
Makes sense to me that it's a real 245a. The art director said it was a farmer's saw that they borrowed. Doesn't seem the "306 with 245 parts" like Mr. Hansen said. I respect the man, though.
I don’t really care either way, but I thought I read somewhere that some production guy or something said “we just sent a guy to the store and told him to buy the biggest chainsaw they could find”. I don’t think they knew or cared what it was…..as you have already noted.
Did you ever sell that 245a? if not let me know. maybe we can make a deal. also if you have, and you come across another one let me know and if the price isn't too insane, you've sold it. "I Don't care if it runs, i want to make it a sort of Prop/Centerpiece for my Texas Chainsaw Massacre Collection"
There is a article I read. From the actor of leather face They used parts from 2 different saws Combo between the 306 AND the 245. I’m sure I’m wrong. But I do not follow or have any interest in horror movies
Thank you so much for telling me this, I am both a chainsaw lover, and a huge fan of the Texas Chainsaw Massacre franchise. I cosplay as leatherface, and I want to make sure I buy the right saw. And now I can.
Actually it was a Poulan 223 (74cc precursor to the 245a)what gives it away is the knob sticking up out of the top of the clutch cover at the back. That is a “Powersharp” control which was a system that was supposed to sharpen your chain but it didn’t work very well and was only offered on the Poulan 203 and 223 before being discontinued on Poulan branded models it was available on Craftsman models for a few years longer.
Having just purchased a 203 and doing research on 203/223 Poulan saws I can confirm that the saw used in the movie is definitely NOT a 223. First off, the clutch cover is different. The circle part with the Poulan sticker is flat on a 203/223. The 306/245 has a raised ridge around the circle. Also the "foot" that the saw rests on (bottom right on clutch cover just below where the bar comes out) is shorter on 203/223 saws. More importantly, 203/223 saws start/throttle lock/kill switch are built differently than the newer 306/245 saws. 203/223 saws don't have a separate toggle kill switch to start/stop. The kill switch is built into the throttle lock switch. Back=start, forward=stop, back and down to start. Starting at 2:48 of the following high definition clip, you can clearly see Leatherface toggle the start switch on and push the throttle lock straight forward (throttle lock on a 306/245 saw) to start his saw. That would put it in the off position on a 223 saw. Also if you watch in slow motion as he raises the saw, you can see the off/on toggle switch to the left of the back handle. Lastly , you can clearly see that the movie saw doesn't have a Powersharp knob. The saw in the film has to be a 245a. th-cam.com/video/okyEJXoMHBg/w-d-xo.htmlsi=znKvDh1txV9eLLll
Thanks so much for clearing that up, l am totally on board with your research and finding, one issue that leaves me perplexed, the 306A model is 59cc, the 245 is 74cc , having that said, the 372 xp Husqvarna is 72 cc , the 394xp is 94cc, roughly speaking of course, the Poulan model numbers look ass backwards to me, can you help me out here, totally interested and love your content !!!
Poulans 203 was the predecessor of the 306. It was made from 1968-1970. Poulan also made saws under other department store names. As an example, I have a Gambles Skogmo Sabre 300, which is actually a Poulan 203. I don't know why but apparently they didn't do that for the 223 which was the predecessor of the 245. So anyway, my guess is when they updated for the new model they wanted to make sure everyone knew it was the newer better saw so they used a higher number than anything they'd previously used. So 306 is higher than 300 and 245 is higher than 223.
I've been saying it was the 245a forever. Due to the exact reasons you mentioned. In the newest 2022 Texas Chainsaw Massacre film, he uses the 306a. The model number is visible on the saw through the movie. The didn't hide it with tape like they did in the original. Another argument about the saw that was used in the '74 film is the muffler style. Some say the saw used was a 306a because of the muffler style. Some say they changed out the top cover and muffler on the 306a to the top cover and muffler of the 245a. Which is ridiculous. It was a 245a in the original film. No doubt about it. Glad you made this video. Now maybe the debate will end. Thanx for sharing this, brother.
Yep. Which is astonishing to me. They fucked up. preview.redd.it/py3dfxtp9vj81.jpg?width=2400&format=pjpg&auto=webp&v=enabled&s=57b3228bc549b57020fe5da752a72418b60dc819 Zoom in and you can see the cursive "Two Forty Five" script, which is far different from the 306 script.
I do landscaping and we frankenstien chainsaws. Weedeaters. Blowers. And every other peice of equipment togather on a regular bases. The saw was probably somones work saw that was stolen and pawned that was purchased from the pawn by the crew instead of buying a new one for more money and then having to weather it.
True story back in the 80s my uncle and his friend was big into chainsaws my uncle only bought jonsered and his friend was a big poulan pro he had several of them he didn't watch horror movies but i remember him renting the texas chainsaw massacre back in the 80s on VHS and pausing the video over and over just to see what model saw he was using i was just a teenager but this stuck in my mind!!!!
They took the felling dogs off. preview.redd.it/py3dfxtp9vj81.jpg?width=2400&format=pjpg&auto=webp&v=enabled&s=57b3228bc549b57020fe5da752a72418b60dc819 Zoom in and you can see the cursive "Two Forty Five" script, which is far different from the 306 script. There is no way they changed the tank AND the sticker. This movie was basically made by college students with no money. Why on God's green earth would they modify a 306 to that extent when they could just buy a 245a?
As someone more of a fan of the Hewitt remakes instead of the original Sawyer line cause I grew up with those newer ones I find it hilarious they chose a 359 for the saw. Andrew who played that version of Leatherface is a pretty big dude and it would have been more of a scary look with a high back 365/372/390 or 395 xp saws cause bigger is scarier in the slasher world. Though the 592 XP with it's honkin muffler would have more scare factor today with its size and noise or an original reed valve saw like a Homelite or Pioneer and earlier McCullochs and maybe Poulan's I'm very weak on the Poulan subject. But the famous Hollywood saws would be a good video special 👌
Nobody dances with a chainsaw like Leatherface
I remember someone met and talked to Gunnar Hansen in person for an autograph and asked him what chainsaw did he used, Gunnar Hansen got annoyed and corrected so many people, gunnar hansen said himself that he clearly didnt used 245a chainsaw, he used 306a chainsaw with 245a part top cover on it.
He was wrong.
preview.redd.it/py3dfxtp9vj81.jpg?width=2400&format=pjpg&auto=webp&v=enabled&s=57b3228bc549b57020fe5da752a72418b60dc819
Zoom in and you can see the cursive "Two Forty Five" script, which is far different from the 306 script.
There is no way they changed the tank AND the sticker. This movie was basically made by college students with no money. Why on God's green earth would they modify a 306 to that extent when they could just buy a 245a?
He even wrote it in his book it was a 306 with 245 parts. I also read somewhere they borrowed the saw from a farmer. So maybe he converted with better parts from a 245. Who knows
@@The_Alabama_Slasherit was borrowed from a farmer. Who knows where that chainsaw went after
Dude you can clearly tell it’s a 245 a the 306 has a different top
@@The.jokes.on.you1997 the tops can be changed. There's like 4 different chainsaws made by poulan that look identical with some slight differences. The 306 and 245 (apart from internal differences) the tank and filter (black parts on top) can be interchanged freely. If you read the comments you wouldn't have even typed that.
Actually, yes. It is correct, the chainsaw Gunnar Hansen's Leatherface used was the Poulan 245A. Mainly because the Poulan 245A typically featured a smaller engine compared to the 306A and generally the 306A had a larger engine, providing more power for cutting tasks. This made it more suitable for heavy-duty or professional use. Meanwhile the 245A was more lightweight and compact chainsaw, suitable for lighter tasks and easier maneuverability. Also by the fact that the Poulan 245A was likely produced in the 1960s and 1970s and it was one of the most selled chainsaw models, even after it got popularity thanks to the 1974 TCM film.
The saw used was a Poulan 223. The giveaways are the fact they used electrical tape on one strip of the clutch cover, directly in the center. On the 223, the only printing on the clutch cover is the word poulan. On the 306a and 245 a, it has a different poulan font that at the top portion of the clutch cover circle, and in the middle in white either says 306a or 245a. In the film, only the middle has tape and there's no other lettering on the clutch cover. This is a giveaway that the clutch cover belongs to the 223 model. The 223 models also have the same handles and the same air filter top as the 245a which may be confusing while first looking.
The other giveaway that it is a 223 is the Powersharp knob which you can see in the film. It ONLY existed on the 223!
In some pictures it can be read that it says "two fourtyfive" above the tape
Also in the 4k version you can clearly see it has the ignition switch, so it's a 245a, no discussion.
Not definitive enough. The 223 had several style switch combinations. Some had the decompression style and the later ones had a switch just like the 245. So YES discussion case not closed. @@krshr39
@@Old_Indian_Trick so it's a 223 with a cover that says "two-fourtyfive"
idk where the hell you see that in a blurry old picture covered in tape @@krshr39
Regardless of what model Gunnar used, it took a prerty nasty fall when he threw it up in the air as high as he could at final cut.
I talked with bill moseley (chop top) and he saw the real saw used in the first movie and he told me it was a frankenstein between both saws. No one but whoever got the actual saw knows but the og saw does have both 245a and 306a parts on the outside. To me i think it was a saw that had a lot of real working hours and needed cheap replacement parts.
I've been a Stihl for a number of years and I've secretly been wondering this for a while
love the video and the channel, I recently found out the actor who played leatherface in the 74 film wrote a book, and in the book he said it was a previously owned 306a that was modified. this is something you can tell because on the top of the chainsaw you can see that the 245a parts have different amounts of weathering.
I should have drilled down on this harder in the video. I know about the actor making this claim...but I literally do not believe him. Been on too many film shoots. What I believe to have happened is that he was on some scale caught making a false statement by accident. Like maybe...somewhere he saw a 306 and recognized it (incorrectly) as his saw. Then in some situation he said the saw used was a 306, but then was proven wrong by the different gas tank and muffler. So then, as I have seen millions of times, the story becomes a conglomeration of fact and fiction. It definitely was a farmers saw, and to save face, he made up the modified bit. Put on your critical thinking hat...in 1974, what farmer would have taken a brand new Poulan 306 and modified it with a 245 fuel tank and muffler? None. It would not have happened. The actor is lying. And over the years, he told the story so often that it became reality in his brain, and there was no one who could correct him. That chainsaw in the movie is a 245.
Oh, and thanks for liking the channel!
I respectfully disagree good sir. First off the dude that was there has to have dibs on the most credit. The guy that was there we have to start off assuming he knows more about it than we do. Like you said he didn't know anything about saws. So how would he even know they were interchangeable? In his book he said it was a 306 with a 245 tank handle and muffler. If he was telling the truth, it would look exactly like it does in the movie. (and coincidentally those are the exact parts that would've had to been changed for it to look like it does).
As you said it was a low budget film. As he said in the book they were trying to avoid a lawsuit from poulan. If they took 2 saws and switched over a few parts to make a Frankensaw and then covered up the poulan logo, it would be harder to sue them for using a specific saw.
They got it from a farmer not from a store. Maybe the farmer busted the gas tank on his 4 year old saw and bought the bigger one just for the extra gas storage.
To me it boils down to there is nothing about the saw that discredits his story. So I lean towards he was telling the truth. Cuz what's his motivation for lying about it? He didn't just get the models mixed up and then run with it, he specifically said they switched those parts so he would've had to completely make that up and I just don't see why he would do that
I just bought a Poulan 31 from a guy, and he was trying to sell me "the ACTUAL chainsaw Leatherface used, not the one people think he used". Unfortunately I spent all my money on the 31 so I wasn't as interested as I would have been otherwise, so I don't know which model he had. He did have a few dozen old saws so I imagine it was a 245. Hopefully I can raise some money to go shopping through his shed soon.
Did you get it??
@@lordpean I didn't. It turns out it was in fact a Poulan 245a, running and in pretty good shape, with a 20" bar. But he was asking $350 for it, then eventually sold it for $200. I never would have been able to afford even $200, but somebody got a good deal
Makes sense to me that it's a real 245a. The art director said it was a farmer's saw that they borrowed. Doesn't seem the "306 with 245 parts" like Mr. Hansen said. I respect the man, though.
He also said it was yellow.
@@novicelumberjack the earlier models of both model saws were a yellowish color
I don’t really care either way, but I thought I read somewhere that some production guy or something said “we just sent a guy to the store and told him to buy the biggest chainsaw they could find”. I don’t think they knew or cared what it was…..as you have already noted.
Did you ever sell that 245a? if not let me know. maybe we can make a deal. also if you have, and you come across another one let me know and if the price isn't too insane, you've sold it. "I Don't care if it runs, i want to make it a sort of Prop/Centerpiece for my Texas Chainsaw Massacre Collection"
Very Interesting Sir! I learned something new as usual!😁
Plot twist! It was actually a red Craftsman that was painted green…(satire)
Hahahaha! Took me a second to see where you were going there, but now I know.
There is a article I read. From the actor of leather face They used parts from 2 different saws
Combo between the 306 AND the 245. I’m sure I’m wrong. But I do not follow or have any interest in horror movies
Thank you so much for telling me this, I am both a chainsaw lover, and a huge fan of the Texas Chainsaw Massacre franchise. I cosplay as leatherface, and I want to make sure I buy the right saw. And now I can.
Wanna buy mine? The one in the video? If so, shoot me an email. Boedy@woodsmanessentials.com
@@novicelumberjack Did you ever sell it? if not how much are you looking for?
@@novicelumberjacksi funciona bien te lo compro, escríbeme
So there's no such thing as turn signal fluid ?
I’ve been in the market for a 245a for 6 months now. Do you know anyone who has one for sale or any leads on where I can find one? Thank you
You can buy this one. $250 shipped in the lower 49sp. Power head only. If interested, email me at Boedychainsaws@gmail.com
@@novicelumberjackwould you take $200 for it? I’ve seen your videos so I know you got it running great haha. Big fan of your videos btw
@@MrLunchHour2 sure, if you pay an extra $50 for shipping.
@@novicelumberjack that’s a deal. I get paid Thursday I’ll email you then. Thank you
Actually it was a Poulan 223 (74cc precursor to the 245a)what gives it away is the knob sticking up out of the top of the clutch cover at the back. That is a “Powersharp” control which was a system that was supposed to sharpen your chain but it didn’t work very well and was only offered on the Poulan 203 and 223 before being discontinued on Poulan branded models it was available on Craftsman models for a few years longer.
Having just purchased a 203 and doing research on 203/223 Poulan saws I can confirm that the saw used in the movie is definitely NOT a 223. First off, the clutch cover is different. The circle part with the Poulan sticker is flat on a 203/223. The 306/245 has a raised ridge around the circle. Also the "foot" that the saw rests on (bottom right on clutch cover just below where the bar comes out) is shorter on 203/223 saws. More importantly, 203/223 saws start/throttle lock/kill switch are built differently than the newer 306/245 saws. 203/223 saws don't have a separate toggle kill switch to start/stop. The kill switch is built into the throttle lock switch. Back=start, forward=stop, back and down to start. Starting at 2:48 of the following high definition clip, you can clearly see Leatherface toggle the start switch on and push the throttle lock straight forward (throttle lock on a 306/245 saw) to start his saw. That would put it in the off position on a 223 saw. Also if you watch in slow motion as he raises the saw, you can see the off/on toggle switch to the left of the back handle. Lastly , you can clearly see that the movie saw doesn't have a Powersharp knob. The saw in the film has to be a 245a. th-cam.com/video/okyEJXoMHBg/w-d-xo.htmlsi=znKvDh1txV9eLLll
One other reason it isn’t a 223. The 223 has the gas cap underneath the handle bar towards the back. The 245 has the cap at the front of the tank.
Thanks so much for clearing that up, l am totally on board with your research and finding, one issue that leaves me perplexed, the 306A model is 59cc, the 245 is 74cc , having that said, the 372 xp Husqvarna is 72 cc , the 394xp is 94cc, roughly speaking of course, the Poulan model numbers look ass backwards to me, can you help me out here, totally interested and love your content !!!
306 for 3.6 cubic inch an 245 for 4.5 cubic inch
Poulans 203 was the predecessor of the 306. It was made from 1968-1970. Poulan also made saws under other department store names. As an example, I have a Gambles Skogmo Sabre 300, which is actually a Poulan 203. I don't know why but apparently they didn't do that for the 223 which was the predecessor of the 245. So anyway, my guess is when they updated for the new model they wanted to make sure everyone knew it was the newer better saw so they used a higher number than anything they'd previously used. So 306 is higher than 300 and 245 is higher than 223.
I've been saying it was the 245a forever. Due to the exact reasons you mentioned. In the newest 2022 Texas Chainsaw Massacre film, he uses the 306a. The model number is visible on the saw through the movie. The didn't hide it with tape like they did in the original. Another argument about the saw that was used in the '74 film is the muffler style. Some say the saw used was a 306a because of the muffler style. Some say they changed out the top cover and muffler on the 306a to the top cover and muffler of the 245a. Which is ridiculous. It was a 245a in the original film. No doubt about it. Glad you made this video. Now maybe the debate will end. Thanx for sharing this, brother.
In the old movie I thought he used a 10-10 Automatic?
@@eugenecrabs3954 Nope. Was a Poulan 245a. In the 4th film it was either a Mac 10-10 or a Mac 700. I forget which.
@@CutterCHothers say 223
@@DEFALT_HORROR Definitely not a 223.
@@CutterCH I didn't think so either, but someone in the comments here said the movie had a part only seen on the 223
Poulan 306a used in Texas chainsaw massacre 2022
Yep. Which is astonishing to me. They fucked up.
preview.redd.it/py3dfxtp9vj81.jpg?width=2400&format=pjpg&auto=webp&v=enabled&s=57b3228bc549b57020fe5da752a72418b60dc819
Zoom in and you can see the cursive "Two Forty Five" script, which is far different from the 306 script.
I do landscaping and we frankenstien chainsaws. Weedeaters. Blowers. And every other peice of equipment togather on a regular bases. The saw was probably somones work saw that was stolen and pawned that was purchased from the pawn by the crew instead of buying a new one for more money and then having to weather it.
He def used a 245A
True story back in the 80s my uncle and his friend was big into chainsaws my uncle only bought jonsered and his friend was a big poulan pro he had several of them he didn't watch horror movies but i remember him renting the texas chainsaw massacre back in the 80s on VHS and pausing the video over and over just to see what model saw he was using i was just a teenager but this stuck in my mind!!!!
Haha! I do that stuff all the time. Cool to know it was happening all the way back in the 80's!
reason i deleted was because i typed it out wrong because thank god i was able to remember that lol but yes it was the 245 a.
Hey Boedy, love the channel man. I have a great pic to share from the movie but I can’t attach a pic. How come?
It the poulan306a chainsaw cuse thers no cicolr thing up front
They took the felling dogs off.
preview.redd.it/py3dfxtp9vj81.jpg?width=2400&format=pjpg&auto=webp&v=enabled&s=57b3228bc549b57020fe5da752a72418b60dc819
Zoom in and you can see the cursive "Two Forty Five" script, which is far different from the 306 script.
There is no way they changed the tank AND the sticker. This movie was basically made by college students with no money. Why on God's green earth would they modify a 306 to that extent when they could just buy a 245a?
I’m convinced, nice work
Hey man, you’re a moviestar👍🏻 there was homelite xl tag on your first screenshot:)
Interesting what saw they would use if they film these days?
Two nice songs you got there
As someone more of a fan of the Hewitt remakes instead of the original Sawyer line cause I grew up with those newer ones I find it hilarious they chose a 359 for the saw. Andrew who played that version of Leatherface is a pretty big dude and it would have been more of a scary look with a high back 365/372/390 or 395 xp saws cause bigger is scarier in the slasher world. Though the 592 XP with it's honkin muffler would have more scare factor today with its size and noise or an original reed valve saw like a Homelite or Pioneer and earlier McCullochs and maybe Poulan's I'm very weak on the Poulan subject. But the famous Hollywood saws would be a good video special 👌
👍s🆙Big Guy!
This video could of been 4 minutes long. Get to the point, stick to the point.
You're welcome!
Poulan245 a
That was great! Lol