I love watchin you run a saw but boy that pains my heart to see that big Cedar bucked up into firewood.... I need that delivered to my sawmill in 12 foot lenghts!!
just came to see the Big Mac eat. got my Dad's Mac 110 in the barn............beast of a saw.............other saws cower when it starts. Men were Men. wb
Hey buckin, i grow up around logging and ranching, my step dad was a logger, in the past 6 or 7 years, i got back into the wood, firewood mostly, but watching your videos has ignited a forgotten passion for power saws, thank you brother for all you share, i love watching your videos. God bless and be safe brother.
I just witnessed the most awesome thing i believe I have ever experienced... a Mcculloch Super Pro 125C, a 50 year old power saw, getting ran harder than I've ever seen anywhere else on the Tube. One cut after the other after the other, at a super rapid pace, just like the men who used them when they were brand new, and came back asking for more!! That is impressive!! A new ms881 would get walked on by that thing! Love it!! Hey Buckin, if you read this, we the peoples need more videos like this! Big wood, big saws, getting run on the ragged edge! Keep it coming
Now that's what you call everything working together( bar and chain, fuel mixture, etc.) and when you have that, the saw does all the work, not the other way around! The ''sweet sound of the '70's''....Buckin', I remember it well! That is one nice saw my friend!!!
I grew up with an old Homelite saw, not nearly that big. Used it around our farm for clearing fallen trees and keeping the edges of the fields in check. We also had a pair of vintage Pioneer saws. Didn't use them much, they were huge for what we needed most of the time, but they came out for big stuff. Those old saws could be tempermental to get tuned in and start sometimes. but when they went, they just didn't give a hoot what was in front of them. We used one of those Pioneers to cut up a building. A building. Into 3' by 8' sections we could load on the old farm truck to haul to the local dump. i was too young to handle it at that time, my older brother got to do it. he has the saw running in his hands standing next to this old youngstock building, laughs and asks my Pa "how am I supposed to do this?" to which my Pa told him" just start cutting, that saw won't care. make some squares or somthing. Don't let it kick back on you." So my brother wound it up and plunged it into the wall and was laughing the whole time as he sawed a line down towards the ground. Old pro grade saws were raw power. EPA has interfered with new ones. Because you know, running a chainsaw will destroy the ozone or something. Can't wait until they tell us we can only have electric ones.
I don't think I've ever seen so much sawdust exit the back of a saw as we've seen here. Clearly a powerful saw and a real sharp chain and just the right amount of pressure on the bar. You are the Master, sir!
The Super Pro 125 was my father's favorite saw... he used to work for Fedje and Gunderson back in the day... big wood up and down the coast... ;) Cheers Billy!
Hey Buckin’ I’m from Virginia & I love your channel. I’ve learned so much from you & enjoy watching everything you put out here for us all. Thank you for being such a great person spreading the wealth of knowledge & passion you have inside of you for the timber cutting life. Be kind!
I was a boy in the 70's. My Grand daddy had a Mac and I was afraid of it. Big, yellow,long bar and sounded like a monster. When I was big enough to run it. I knew I was somebody. You are spot on with that saw. They are just fantastic.
Oh hell yeah! My grandfather had one too - it was huge, it was angry and scared the hell outta me! I was just a little guy in the early 70s but remember him struggling just to pull the damn thing over. Once that beast fired I just wanted to escape with my arms and legs intact. It would idle its way across the driveway if you let it and man, that thing was heavy.
The amount of chips that old Mac puts it is crazy. By the way, when I was 13, my first job was at a hardware store. We sold and repaired Mac’s. I built several 10-10’s out of wore out saws that where under the bench in a box. Oh how I wish I had them today. Love the channel by the way.
Back in the 70s my dad had a mac 10-10, I remember it had a 16" bar and one time he got it pinched in a tree he was cutting down and only about 6-8" of the bar tip was in it and as we were trying to figure out what to do the weight of the saw bent the bar, yeah it was that heavy of a saw but powerful.
For me as a Saw lovin Mechanic and Sawbuilder , it is a pleasure to see your Connectin to your Saws. Most Fellers are just droppin Trees and need Autotune Saws. You know that Fuel cools your Engine. You will never frie a Piston because you can Feel whats going on with your Powersaw. Thats a Gift you own Man in every Time of your Life with or without a Saw in your Hand. Kind Regards from Germany.
HI BUCKIN I can remember those old school chainsaws when I was a kid years ago growing they cut and pull just like tractor I ran 1 not long ago U could feel it pulling when it was cutting pulling your arms out U had 2 hold on 2 it a cutting ,pulling machine cutting trees and stove wood 😊😊 TLC/OMG 4 6 2O23
@@robertdancho9671 I was referring to the big red Homelite being used to blow the chips away at about the 1.30min in the video before he changed over to the Mac.
Great video, you never let us down. The Fuelman said that. Today was cutting and splitting, always fun but tomorrow is back to driving truck, never as much fun
Love the old saws. Been thinking of sending my Pro Mac 700 that I have had since 1972 to the Tinman for an upgrade. I had a 125 Mac until I needed money for school in 1973. Wish I had never sold it.
My father, Robert Gamsby worked for McCulloch from 1962 1987 from Long Beach California where he started to Lake Havasu Arizona where he ended he was the one who engineered the power max six he has a McCulloch 125 still in the box that was given to him when he retired and the number one in a box power max six that the engineer great video enjoy them very much. I have a pro Mac 8200 only cut with a three times works great for a newer. McCulloch reminds me of my 850 that I use more than I do the 8200.
Yes Absolutely the sweet sound of the 70s!! Brings back so many memories!! This was an amazing video!! Buckin please do another video on how to process large rounds! Rippin and splitting!! Please 🤗🤗
I'll bet that 90% of people don't know what you did at 11:38 in this video.....OIL THE BAR...Done that for years with the old Homelite's and Mac's. Looks like you have some thick Oil in that thing as hard as you had to push it. I JUST found your videos and will be watching more.....yes, I Subscribed too. Thanks and keep them coming for this Ol' Sawyer. Started in the mid 60's at 15yrs old (No LABOR LAWS back then allowed me work while STILL in school.) Those were "THE DAYS"...Good or Bad, just "THE DAYS"...LOL
Can't wait to see the next saw you get from Ironhorse. It'll be in great hand. Thanks for the safety advice. It just may save someone's life. Thanks Buckin
Bought a Pouland 42cc that had been rebuilt for $50 cash 5 years ago, I cut 12 to 14 cords each and every year , 2 bars and about 8 saw chains later it still cuts just fine , I spent more on bars and saw chains than I paid for the chainsaw to start with
Love those old muscle saws; bit by the Homelite bug a few years back........ My brother calls it my obsession; he's right. There's something about hearing that deep metallic ping when she's idling.
@@BuckinBillyRaySmith That super pro 125 is a reed valve saw iirc … McCullough has very good cylinder flow right from the factory! - but can be improved - my mentor is a McCullough wizard ( fell timber in BC in the 70’s) do me a small fava Buckin - I only need a few hundred subs to get 1000 - send the Buckin army and I’ll buy that wicked axe or donate to your cause thanks 🙏
BBR: with you 100%. While these new saws have fancy gizmos, computer controlled carburetion etc, they also have debilitating EPA and state controlled emissions limits which cut power. That’s pretty much why I started only buying vintage Huskies and ensuring they work and then doing any necessary refurbishing. After that when you start your muffler mods, custom air filters , etc, they really start screaming unlike anything you can buy now. Just MHO
…. I’d also add that within 20 years the sales of gas powered two stroke engines will either be banned or made so cost prohibitive that manufacturers will just do battery powered. I’m not for it. I hate it. But as an attorney I know that the general public is mostly unaware of the tens of thousands of pages of environmental regulations in the federal register and state regs. Manufacturers are being strangled and coerced into limiting emissions which lessens power generally. There are even regs which regulate rebuilding two strokes. Ridiculous
@@gnaedigerfels be glad you’re not from the US my friend. If you’re a fan of good power machines and saws the Greenies, technocrats and bureaucrats are coming after our fun two stroke machines. They hide behind gray buildings surrounded by Jersey barriers and rent a cops and conjure ways to our cold water on all the World’s fun. They make no distinction between conservation and over regulation. There are those of us here in the States who do not depend on the largesse of these nameless, faceless bureaucrats who not only reap our tax dollars like Stalin did to the Kulaks, but also make their living on them, taking their vacations to the US Virgin Islands. They and their corporate confederates come up with schemes like “carbon credits “, which reminds me of the way in which royals and Lords could buy penance and Grace from Rome by making exorbitant donations to the Church as compensation for Sin. Personally I’d prefer to be left alone, but now even people like me are being made to care. It’s in your face. I know you his seems off topic but it isn’t. The end user never knows or sees the hidden regulatory impact on their products. Sometimes they’re apparent like limiter caps. But our Code of Federal Regulations is so thick that if you lined each page up end to end you could walk to the Moon on them. Boy our Framers were brilliant men of Classics, but they blew it by believing in the postulate that good men will always act with Virtue. Well, that went out the window long ago, especially when Nixon took us off the Gold Standard to use fiat funny money to fund our Phantom Fourth Branch of Government, the Bureaucracy. Their promulgations have the force of law despite nary a citizen voting for one damn word of their environmental regulations. What they want is to drive us back to the Stone Age. Use windmills, water power etc. All sounds great until one realizes that’s how Civilization lived until the Industrial Age which, with the aid of Free Enterprise and the Rule of Law and Private Property, has lifted more humans out of poverty worldwide than anything these idiots could ever dream up. Yet, despite advances in technology in some quarters, they want to drive us into large cities, get rid of our cars, ATV’s, boats and take public transportation like some urban hamster wheel. Hell with that. The States are a great place to visit, but don’t live on the Coasts.
I have access to a bunch of old saws, mcculloch and homelite and husky, big ones and tree climbers, the BBR experience is making me want to go dig into them, mechanically restore them and put to use some fine vintage machinery in the almond orchards. Love your work BBR
My dad has an old cp125. Hasnt run in a few years, starts hard, but once its running; holy crap. We also have a stihl 090, and a homelite 1130g. All the same story.
I felt you pain pumping that oiler lol my 790 is the same way exptley when the oil is cold love the old McCullough's I'll take torque over crazy rpm any day.
I had a MAC 10 and also a Timber Bear. The Mac 10 had great power but was really, really, loud, even with ear muffs. I usually wore ear plugs and ear muffs with that one.
Mr. Smith... watching the other various channels, I have noticed that your saws always seem to out-perform everyone else's' saws. Your saws cut faster, produce more and finer wood chips with each cut... and just generally run better. Moreover, your expert technique makes it look *easy*... and anyone who has ever done this kind of work in any capacity knows darned well it is far from easy work. My hat is off to you, sir!
As soon as I saw that yellow, I knew it was a McCulloch. Good memories with that gear driven monster! Thx
I love watchin you run a saw but boy that pains my heart to see that big Cedar bucked up into firewood.... I need that delivered to my sawmill in 12 foot lenghts!!
bucked up bolts for cedar shakes. unless they are close to a road. probally air lifted out.
Yeah same here,if I didn’t enjoy Billy’s video’s so much I’d be cry’n 🥴
Absolutely loved seeing the vintage Homelite and Mcculloch in their natural environment.
When I was young you'd see those saws everywhere but now they're unicorns 🦄.
@@WhiteOak09 today is so cheap, i just have got one PM 55, looks indestructible
@@aspergeblanche9502 they're little tuffies .
just came to see the Big Mac eat. got my Dad's Mac 110 in the barn............beast of a saw.............other saws cower when it starts. Men were Men. wb
Hey buckin, i grow up around logging and ranching, my step dad was a logger, in the past 6 or 7 years, i got back into the wood, firewood mostly, but watching your videos has ignited a forgotten passion for power saws, thank you brother for all you share, i love watching your videos. God bless and be safe brother.
good stuff
I just witnessed the most awesome thing i believe I have ever experienced... a Mcculloch Super Pro 125C, a 50 year old power saw, getting ran harder than I've ever seen anywhere else on the Tube. One cut after the other after the other, at a super rapid pace, just like the men who used them when they were brand new, and came back asking for more!! That is impressive!! A new ms881 would get walked on by that thing! Love it!! Hey Buckin, if you read this, we the peoples need more videos like this! Big wood, big saws, getting run on the ragged edge! Keep it coming
Now that's what you call everything working together( bar and chain, fuel mixture, etc.) and when you have that, the saw does all the work, not the other way around! The ''sweet sound of the '70's''....Buckin', I remember it well! That is one nice saw my friend!!!
loving to hear this old saws running so good,its like music to my ears.
Buckin I had a 125 back in the early 80's, dang I miss that saw, thanks for sharing yours, best saw I ever owned !!!
you bet
I think it’s cool you still run those old saws and have so much love for them. Bit heavy but man they had power.
Love watching those old saws run, I have a old 1971 Homelite SXL in perfect condition out in the barn, I'll run it a little about once a year.
Keep runin her they are great saws
I grew up with an old Homelite saw, not nearly that big. Used it around our farm for clearing fallen trees and keeping the edges of the fields in check.
We also had a pair of vintage Pioneer saws. Didn't use them much, they were huge for what we needed most of the time, but they came out for big stuff. Those old saws could be tempermental to get tuned in and start sometimes. but when they went, they just didn't give a hoot what was in front of them.
We used one of those Pioneers to cut up a building. A building. Into 3' by 8' sections we could load on the old farm truck to haul to the local dump. i was too young to handle it at that time, my older brother got to do it. he has the saw running in his hands standing next to this old youngstock building, laughs and asks my Pa "how am I supposed to do this?" to which my Pa told him" just start cutting, that saw won't care. make some squares or somthing. Don't let it kick back on you." So my brother wound it up and plunged it into the wall and was laughing the whole time as he sawed a line down towards the ground.
Old pro grade saws were raw power. EPA has interfered with new ones. Because you know, running a chainsaw will destroy the ozone or something. Can't wait until they tell us we can only have electric ones.
Yeah, that 125 pro definitely eats that wood like soft candy. Love it! Thank you for your continued tutelage.
you bet
I don't think I've ever seen so much sawdust exit the back of a saw as we've seen here. Clearly a powerful saw and a real sharp chain and just the right amount of pressure on the bar. You are the Master, sir!
The Super Pro 125 was my father's favorite saw... he used to work for Fedje and Gunderson back in the day... big wood up and down the coast... ;) Cheers Billy!
Bearclaw ended up with alot of those macs, got a few myself
Hey Buckin’ I’m from Virginia & I love your channel. I’ve learned so much from you & enjoy watching everything you put out here for us all. Thank you for being such a great person spreading the wealth of knowledge & passion you have inside of you for the timber cutting life. Be kind!
@@MATT.MAN-PEACE-LOVE 🐝✌️❤️🌲🪓🐝
Welcome to the channel!
I'm from Virginia too 😁👍
Lexington VA here
Orange va here
Staunton Va here! Learning so much from Buckin'.
The plume of chips coming off that Mac is insane. That is what I am talking about right there.
I was a boy in the 70's.
My Grand daddy had a Mac and I was afraid of it.
Big, yellow,long bar and sounded like a monster. When I was big enough to run it. I knew I was somebody. You are spot on with that saw. They are just fantastic.
Oh hell yeah! My grandfather had one too - it was huge, it was angry and scared the hell outta me! I was just a little guy in the early 70s but remember him struggling just to pull the damn thing over. Once that beast fired I just wanted to escape with my arms and legs intact. It would idle its way across the driveway if you let it and man, that thing was heavy.
The amount of chips that old Mac puts it is crazy. By the way, when I was 13, my first job was at a hardware store. We sold and repaired Mac’s. I built several 10-10’s out of wore out saws that where under the bench in a box. Oh how I wish I had them today. Love the channel by the way.
thx
Those arnt chips those are 🪵 logs it’s spitting out
Back in the 70s my dad had a mac 10-10, I remember it had a 16" bar and one time he got it pinched in a tree he was cutting down and only about 6-8" of the bar tip was in it and as we were trying to figure out what to do the weight of the saw bent the bar, yeah it was that heavy of a saw but powerful.
For me as a Saw lovin Mechanic and Sawbuilder , it is a pleasure to see your Connectin to your Saws.
Most Fellers are just droppin Trees and need Autotune Saws. You know that Fuel cools your Engine. You will never frie a Piston because you can Feel whats going on with your Powersaw. Thats a Gift you own Man in every Time of your Life with or without a Saw in your Hand.
Kind Regards from Germany.
I love the sound of the old Homelite saws!
Man that thing EATS!!
And fuel consumption is mind blowing!!
My Gramp had a couple old McCullochs he would always rave about.
HI BUCKIN I can remember those old school chainsaws when I was a kid years ago growing they cut and pull just like tractor I ran 1 not long ago U could feel it pulling when it was cutting pulling your arms out U had 2 hold on 2 it a cutting ,pulling machine cutting trees and stove wood 😊😊 TLC/OMG 4 6 2O23
Wow buckin! that old mcculloch is one hungry saw awesome to see old school saws still chewing the wood up! Thanks for the great video!
A ported 044 was the saw we used on the landing for bucking, back in the late 80's.
Just like that Mac, Stihl saws from that era were built to last.
I had a Super 610 for firewood for 20 years it never missed a beat and always cut more wood than i could haul in one day.
Those two old saws sound, run and cut great. Loved it when you blew the chips away with the Homelite exhaust.
That was the mac
@@robertdancho9671 I was referring to the big red Homelite being used to blow the chips away at about the 1.30min in the video before he changed over to the Mac.
Great video, you never let us down. The Fuelman said that. Today was cutting and splitting, always fun but tomorrow is back to driving truck, never as much fun
There's no replacement for displacement. That big dog really knows how to eat. Deadly. Love it.
Hey,the sound of the Mcculloch brings me good memories . Thank you !
kool
That ol 125 makes quick work out of anything!!
I like it in the fir actually
I just love the sound of the old saws.
Love the old saws. Been thinking of sending my Pro Mac 700 that I have had since 1972 to the Tinman for an upgrade. I had a 125 Mac until I needed money for school in 1973. Wish I had never sold it.
My father, Robert Gamsby worked for McCulloch from 1962 1987 from Long Beach California where he started to Lake Havasu Arizona where he ended he was the one who engineered the power max six he has a McCulloch 125 still in the box that was given to him when he retired and the number one in a box power max six that the engineer great video enjoy them very much. I have a pro Mac 8200 only cut with a three times works great for a newer. McCulloch reminds me of my 850 that I use more than I do the 8200.
Good morning Buckin, really sad they quit making those beast of saws. Tree cutters where I live loved them. Love to all.
..Yes..but the EPA/CARB didn't like them...
Those old homelites are great powersaws, loved the video .
Buckin, I always love seeing videos of u running that homelite! That thing rips!!!
It’s so fun watching you cut and learning. God bless you brother
Yes Absolutely the sweet sound of the 70s!! Brings back so many memories!! This was an amazing video!! Buckin please do another video on how to process large rounds! Rippin and splitting!! Please 🤗🤗
great exercise. love the smell of a hot saw, wood and the great outdoors.
lovely
Thanks Billy that saw is a beast and a pleasure to watch you work it right .
4:28. BBR and the saw smokin a little!. Awesome stuff. Super appreciate the info! Please keep teaching.
Old school big bores are rockin. Man that 125 just eats and eats. Lovin it. 🌲❤️🌲👊🪓
That McColloch is so impressive, a beast without as much as a hiccup. They just don’t make stuff like this anymore
Yes sir watch this with close caption Billy.....when you tuned your saw and started cutting it said applause music. Indeed it was
BUT, pollutes more than a new truck today. That is why on alert days, I mow my lawn with a 1973 Sears mower and drive my Oldsmobile 442 around town!!
😅😅😅😮😮😮😮
That is the single most impressive saw I have ever seen cut!!! I don’t care how old it is that saw is a beast! 👍
they are a glorious experience to operate
I rebuilt some old homelite saws 20 years ago that were truly amazing just like th9s old mac
Something to be said about older saws... Their awesome
That saw has balls. Never lost any power. Just kept going and man it wheels the chips.
I'll bet that 90% of people don't know what you did at 11:38 in this video.....OIL THE BAR...Done that for years with the old Homelite's and Mac's. Looks like you have some thick Oil in that thing as hard as you had to push it.
I JUST found your videos and will be watching more.....yes, I Subscribed too.
Thanks and keep them coming for this Ol' Sawyer. Started in the mid 60's at 15yrs old (No LABOR LAWS back then allowed me work while STILL in school.) Those were "THE DAYS"...Good or Bad, just "THE DAYS"...LOL
Can't wait to see the next saw you get from Ironhorse. It'll be in great hand. Thanks for the safety advice. It just may save someone's life. Thanks Buckin
Bought a Pouland 42cc that had been rebuilt for $50 cash 5 years ago,
I cut 12 to 14 cords each and every year ,
2 bars and about 8 saw chains later it still cuts just fine ,
I spent more on bars and saw chains than I paid for the chainsaw to start with
Big Mac cuts quick and just doesnt stop. Good show Buck.
Love it! Thank you my friend, can’t beat vintage powersaws!
I agree about it's ability, a true beast. A day on the end of one of those got a lot done!
Those ferns behind you look like they're being hit by the discharge of a 2 stage snow-thrower! That thing is a beast!
Love those old muscle saws; bit by the Homelite bug a few years back........
My brother calls it my obsession; he's right.
There's something about hearing that deep metallic ping when she's idling.
Endless torque with that 125 super pro! Doesn’t turn the Rpms like the modern saws but shovels chips like a champ !
you might be surprise Fabulous... on the revs
@@BuckinBillyRaySmith That super pro 125 is a reed valve saw iirc … McCullough has very good cylinder flow right from the factory! - but can be improved - my mentor is a McCullough wizard ( fell timber in BC in the 70’s) do me a small fava Buckin - I only need a few hundred subs to get 1000 - send the Buckin army and I’ll buy that wicked axe or donate to your cause thanks 🙏
My word. That is an impressive machine.They just don't make stuff like that anymore, and it's a shame.
Everything now is built by the Chinese..
the new stuff is lawyer approved, the old stuff was made to work
thats a nice way of puttin it 😜
Years ago I worked in the woods with a guy that had one of these. He called our saws, "Motorized fingernail files"!
Awesome video. Those cedars are beautiful trees and make very nice wood. Those saws just sounds great too
Keep running that 125.. one day I'll have one of my own
That saw falls through that log like nobody's business. Very impressive older saw.
BBR: with you 100%. While these new saws have fancy gizmos, computer controlled carburetion etc, they also have debilitating EPA and state controlled emissions limits which cut power. That’s pretty much why I started only buying vintage Huskies and ensuring they work and then doing any necessary refurbishing. After that when you start your muffler mods, custom air filters , etc, they really start screaming unlike anything you can buy now. Just MHO
no EPA in any brand new chainsaws from stihl or husqvarna, just spark arrestors
…. I’d also add that within 20 years the sales of gas powered two stroke engines will either be banned or made so cost prohibitive that manufacturers will just do battery powered. I’m not for it. I hate it. But as an attorney I know that the general public is mostly unaware of the tens of thousands of pages of environmental regulations in the federal register and state regs. Manufacturers are being strangled and coerced into limiting emissions which lessens power generally. There are even regs which regulate rebuilding two strokes. Ridiculous
@@ocsplc I am not from the US, fine Sir, therefore i cannot fathom what you are talking about, but I do appreciate the effort. have a nice day
@@gnaedigerfels be glad you’re not from the US my friend. If you’re a fan of good power machines and saws the Greenies, technocrats and bureaucrats are coming after our fun two stroke machines. They hide behind gray buildings surrounded by Jersey barriers and rent a cops and conjure ways to our cold water on all the World’s fun. They make no distinction between conservation and over regulation. There are those of us here in the States who do not depend on the largesse of these nameless, faceless bureaucrats who not only reap our tax dollars like Stalin did to the Kulaks, but also make their living on them, taking their vacations to the US Virgin Islands. They and their corporate confederates come up with schemes like “carbon credits “, which reminds me of the way in which royals and Lords could buy penance and Grace from Rome by making exorbitant donations to the Church as compensation for Sin. Personally I’d prefer to be left alone, but now even people like me are being made to care. It’s in your face. I know you his seems off topic but it isn’t. The end user never knows or sees the hidden regulatory impact on their products. Sometimes they’re apparent like limiter caps. But our Code of Federal Regulations is so thick that if you lined each page up end to end you could walk to the Moon on them. Boy our Framers were brilliant men of Classics, but they blew it by believing in the postulate that good men will always act with Virtue. Well, that went out the window long ago, especially when Nixon took us off the Gold Standard to use fiat funny money to fund our Phantom Fourth Branch of Government, the Bureaucracy. Their promulgations have the force of law despite nary a citizen voting for one damn word of their environmental regulations. What they want is to drive us back to the Stone Age. Use windmills, water power etc. All sounds great until one realizes that’s how Civilization lived until the Industrial Age which, with the aid of Free Enterprise and the Rule of Law and Private Property, has lifted more humans out of poverty worldwide than anything these idiots could ever dream up. Yet, despite advances in technology in some quarters, they want to drive us into large cities, get rid of our cars, ATV’s, boats and take public transportation like some urban hamster wheel. Hell with that. The States are a great place to visit, but don’t live on the Coasts.
I have access to a bunch of old saws, mcculloch and homelite and husky, big ones and tree climbers, the BBR experience is making me want to go dig into them, mechanically restore them and put to use some fine vintage machinery in the almond orchards. Love your work BBR
Go for it they are definitely worth the effort.
I have 2 McCullough pro Mac 700 45 years old still running after many cords of fire wood cut one with a bow and bar on the other
Am I the only one that loves the sound of a older saw exhaust? Just sound so mean.
Hey buckin I was in a block we call the fir block and I fell a huge fir and I found my self doing the buckin dance after 🤘🏽
I do know that my fingers hurt just watching and listening to that homelite run.
Hey buckin love those old homelites aye .thanks for sharing....
I used a Homelite just like that when I worked on a utility tree removal crew. That thing vibrated like crazy but it had the grunt.
Back in the 60's I had an old Blue colored Homelite. It cut like nothing made today.
Had an old David-Bradley with 2 position bar geared down for more power. What a machine.
Ohhh yes this is the best music, i love it!!! 💯👍🪓🪓🌲🌲Best regards Bucking my friend!!! 💪
I am picking up an 056 Stihl chainsaw this weekend with the 36-in bar
My dad has an old cp125. Hasnt run in a few years, starts hard, but once its running; holy crap. We also have a stihl 090, and a homelite 1130g. All the same story.
Love that ending "Its a gentleman"
Wow that 125 just absolutely freakin RIPS! Thats Big wood!!!!
I felt you pain pumping that oiler lol my 790 is the same way exptley when the oil is cold love the old McCullough's I'll take torque over crazy rpm any day.
I had a MAC 10 and also a Timber Bear. The Mac 10 had great power but was really, really, loud, even with ear muffs. I usually wore ear plugs and ear muffs with that one.
That thing cuts like a hot knife through butter.....amazing....
This man knows his way around a saw, and big timber. I was worried when he was on the low side but he managed the danger appropriately.
Things that Billy`s forgotten about chainsaws other still need to hear of and learn...
That saw is a monster. Love it!
Loyal ol chainsaw!!! Sounds amazing!!!! I'm glad she landed in ur care!!!!
Watching this with my 6 week old son strapped on my chest. He was fussing until he heard that saw start up, now he's calm as a clam...
That is some healthy sounds with the Chainsaw, thing is Tearing!
Mr. Smith... watching the other various channels, I have noticed that your saws always seem to out-perform everyone else's' saws. Your saws cut faster, produce more and finer wood chips with each cut... and just generally run better. Moreover, your expert technique makes it look *easy*... and anyone who has ever done this kind of work in any capacity knows darned well it is far from easy work. My hat is off to you, sir!
thx
His saws spit out those long curles of wood , he has his chains perfect.
Haha that 125sp gota cut twice a 592 👍 super cool Buckin thanks man
you betcha
Thanks for the video, wishing everyone a wonderful Thanksgiving.
thx perry
Nice buck buckin homelites have great torque reeds rule
Man. That Homelite runs smooth!
That homelite is a beast !
yeah
That yellow chainsaw is a beast of one.
I used to own on old Homelite geared "Super Wizz". It was a hell of a saw.
LOVE your Videos. Kinda give me good Energy in my Life. Started to do Wood also...Greets from Germany
its good for the sole
Yeah the old saws are priceless. Don't make em like they used to buck🤘
Awesome video buckin. Keep the love train moving. 🥰🇨🇦🇺🇸
Buckingham Billy ray it's Ryan's sawmill love ya bud love that mac