Stihl FS250 trimmer...Wow!

   / Stihl FS250 trimmer...Wow!
  • Thread Starter
#22  
Ok guys.I been looking (thinking) about getting a new weed wacker.My old homelite desperatly needs to be put at the curb!. I can't find any prices on line for a Stihl 250. About how much are they going for??
Thanks
M

Paid $475 for it and the salesman threw in a pair of Stihl safty glasses, a Timber Sports cap, a roll of line, and a line cutter. All of these items were in a Stihl promo hardcase. The distributor suggested retail price is $529.95. Here's a link to the model, specs, and dealer locator. http://www.stihlusa.com/trimmers/FS250.html
 
   / Stihl FS250 trimmer...Wow! #23  
Thanks guys for the info.My questions are answered. No dought the 250 is a great machine but it's out of my league.
 
   / Stihl FS250 trimmer...Wow! #24  
My neighbor just got one, it's amazing. Too rich for me too though.
 
   / Stihl FS250 trimmer...Wow! #25  
Mark1 ,might want to look at the FS90,I paid around $340.00 for mine and it has plenty of power.thats with the handle bar. russ
 
   / Stihl FS250 trimmer...Wow! #26  
You can't get better than a Stihl for good quality equipment. I know the Huskie folks will argue this however. I have both a Stihl FS-250 and a FS-450 brush saw as well as other Stihl equipment. The two pics show both. The brush blade is on the 250 and the chisel blade is on the 450.
I use both in site prep work for replanting in a small forestry operation on slopes that I am afraid to get my John Deere close to. I tried a DR brushcutter for site prep but after 3 tech support calls to DR they told me their unit could not do the brush and woody debris that I had. I even set up a test plot for a 30 minute clearing with the DR brushcutter and one for the FS250 with the triangle brush blade. With the DR I was able to finish less than 2/3rds. With the Stihl I did its plot then finished the DR's in less than the 30 minute limit. Since then I got the FS 450 for a bit more power. For those that need less power the small units work well also. The FS130 is a bit of a different motor for those that don't want to go 2 cycle.
Steve IMG_0269.jpg

IMG_0272.jpg
 
   / Stihl FS250 trimmer...Wow! #27  
I paid a little over $400 for my FS250 about 2 years ago - about the same that my FS120 cost 12 years ago and still working great I might add. If you need heavy duty, they're worth the money and actually cheaper than having to continuously repair or replace units that aren't designed for the application. If all you're doing is trimming around residential properties, there are many other much cheaper options in commercial grade trimmers that would serve you well. I do not hide my disdain for the throw away "box store" units. In the long run, they're the most expensive option.

Time for a little research and shopping.:thumbsup:

Jim
 
   / Stihl FS250 trimmer...Wow! #28  
You can't get better than a Stihl for good quality equipment. I know the Huskie folks will argue this however. I have both a Stihl FS-250 and a FS-450 brush saw as well as other Stihl equipment. The two pics show both. The brush blade is on the 250 and the chisel blade is on the 450.
I use both in site prep work for replanting in a small forestry operation on slopes that I am afraid to get my John Deere close to. I tried a DR brushcutter for site prep but after 3 tech support calls to DR they told me their unit could not do the brush and woody debris that I had. I even set up a test plot for a 30 minute clearing with the DR brushcutter and one for the FS250 with the triangle brush blade. With the DR I was able to finish less than 2/3rds. With the Stihl I did its plot then finished the DR's in less than the 30 minute limit. Since then I got the FS 450 for a bit more power. For those that need less power the small units work well also. The FS130 is a bit of a different motor for those that don't want to go 2 cycle.
SteveView attachment 177694

View attachment 177695

Steve, those are both both nice trimmers. I use the same brush blade on my FS130. I have found it to be a very versatile and long wearing blade. Excellent for thick undergrowth and small saplings. It makes a good match to the 4 stroke motor in the FS130 as I don't always need full throttle when clearing brush. Often bursts of half throttle is plenty to keep the rpm up.

How do you like the chipper blade? I was worried I would damage it quickly with all the rocks I have around here.
 
   / Stihl FS250 trimmer...Wow! #29  
I have a 250 with a blade on it and every time I think about selling it I find a use. I normally use a FS 100 for trimming the yard but that 250 with the blade is great for heavy brush ... much better then bending over and cutting it with a machete and then living with a sore back. Great tool when you need it.
 
   / Stihl FS250 trimmer...Wow! #30  
Not a Stihl, but I recently bought an Echo SRM410-U Brush Cutter....pretty impressed so far, 10" 80 tooth saw blade and 42.7cc of 2 stroke power.
$499 delivered and a big plus to me was the 5 year consumer warranty:thumbsup:
 
   / Stihl FS250 trimmer...Wow! #31  
Could have used a 250 today bending over with a chainsaw to cut 2" Buckthorn then the chainsaw cops an attitude and refuses idle ... frustration. :(
 
   / Stihl FS250 trimmer...Wow! #32  
Why are you guys calling the FS130 a 4 cycle?
 
   / Stihl FS250 trimmer...Wow! #33  
And you can add the chisel tooth saw blade to this machine to handle larger brush and small saplings easily up to 1 1/2" and I've taken down 4" trees with it (takes a little time but will do the job).
It is a priceless tool in my tool chest.
+1 here, though mine is a six year old 110. I use the 3-bladed point saw blade 95% of the time. I've got hundreds of hours on mine and have cut probably miles of shooting lanes & ATV trails.

I've bent mine carrying it on the back of my ATV. No real problem until a couple of weeks ago in Canada. Had it strapped a new way on the back, big mistake. Hit a tree and bent it about 30 degrees, thought it was ruined. As I was in the bush with no real options, I stood on it, bounced on it & got it back to 'fairly straight' and started it. Cut six more hours w/o a problem, but knew it needed attention.

Just got a new driveshaft + housing for $150 installed. That's pretty good for a machine I've used for six years cutting literally thousands of saplings--and bigger stuff--plus head-high weeds + hitting rocks etc. It is an amazing machine. The valved motor runs so long on a fill I wish it would run out of gas sooner.
 
   / Stihl FS250 trimmer...Wow! #34  
Why are you guys calling the FS130 a 4 cycle?

When I bought my trimmer, it was labeled as a "4-Mix" motor, which is a 4 stroke cycle but using a gas-oil mix like a 2 stroke.

I see now they are calling the motors "Quad Power". I believe it is the same design, based on a discussion I had a couple months ago with my Stihl dealer. When he was telling me about the FS 250, he mentioned it has a 2 stroke motor, unlike the rest of the pro trimmer range.
 
   / Stihl FS250 trimmer...Wow! #35  
I have the 130 and its a beast too. I wish I would have known there was only $100 difference in price, I would have got the 250. But that said I have cut many a 2- 4 inch sapplings with the chissel tooth blade with no problem. It is simply amazing.
 
   / Stihl FS250 trimmer...Wow! #36  
With all this talk of the FS250, I'd love to try one. I have to say however that the FS130 still is the sweet spot in the Stihl lineup when looking at power to weight ratio. I'm guessing there is more to the 250 than just the 0.25hp extra over the 130. I wish the Stihl website would give more specific differences between the two.
 
   / Stihl FS250 trimmer...Wow! #37  
How do you like the chipper blade? I was worried I would damage it quickly with all the rocks I have around here.

Tsteahr

The Stihl chipper blade works well but if it hits dirt or rocks you need to sharpen it. Done a lot of field sharpening. Not that difficult. There is a company out here in the PNW that makes a carbide tip blade that is great. If it hits the dirt nothing dulls and it works the same. If I hit sandstone, I lose a carbide tip or two. If I hit basalt I pitch 95% of the teeth in nothing flat and the blade is toast. But the flip side is if I keep it out of the rocks it practically never needs sharpening. I can go 30-40 hours where with the non-carbide tip I had to sharpen every 2 -3 hours most of the time. What is the value of time versus material. I use it on thinning and coarse woody stems up to 4-5 inches and sure beats bending over with the chainsaw to thin.

Steve
 
   / Stihl FS250 trimmer...Wow! #38  
After numerous Homelites & the like .......... I finally became fed up with the cheap machines and bought a Stihl 250 and Husqvarna in the same day.

What an amazing difference ............ just as notable as when switching from the cheap chainsaws ....... you never go back.
 
   / Stihl FS250 trimmer...Wow! #39  
A Stihl FS250 trimmer and Stihl MS290 Farm Boss chainsaw are on my to-buy list. Figure a $1,000 bucks might do the trick?
 
   / Stihl FS250 trimmer...Wow! #40  
The only thing I do not like about the 250 for general trimming is they are not well-balanced front to back with a standard loop handle. These machines are really meant for heavy cutting where machine balance is secondary. For lighter duty (but still tough) trimming of banks and around the house, I prefer the lighter and better balanced FS90. It is pretty stout also.

John M
 

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