Advocate III
Advocate III
Navigator I
5773
Off-Road Ranger III
20111
Advocate I
Advocate III
I found a link to making a case.I have a plastic case for mine with a scabbard, like @Todd Sacchi describes. You can put a rag under the bar to soak up any oil, and it works to entirely contain the saw. Or, if having to hike a bit with the saw, the scabbard can be separate to protect the teeth and your clothing, leaving the bulk of the case behind. Here's an example from Amazon:
That being said, the weight and bulk of a saw means it stays home more often than it comes with us, and instead we rely on a Bow Saw:
The Bow Saw will rip through a tree very quickly, and that is our use case most of the time -- a tree on the road. The bow saw requires a bit more effort but it's not much slower. If you are encountering a large number of trees down, this is not a good option though.
And that brings me to my third suggestion - consider a battery saw. The Milwaukee style saws are super compact, and you can bring a few batteries to "hot bunk" them and get a fair bit of cutting time and power in much less weight and space than the fuel and oil cans for a gas saw. They are not as good as a big gas saw, but they are close, and they are lighter and easier to transport. (Edit - I originally said they don't appear to leak oil but I just learned that was not correct; some form of storage solution would still be required - if anyone has a battery saw with a good no-leak storage solution I'd be keen to hear about it!)
Really good point about winter use, MidOH. I hadn't thought of that but it would be nice if Mr. Project Farm added a "freezer test" to the next electric chainsaw shootout!My recovery gear box is a 55g Stanley tote. So no worries about oil.
I remove the blade assembly from the saw so it's easier/smaller to store.
The battery saws bleed energy in the winter. All of my service trucks battery tools stink in the winter. (Sawzall, impact, ratchet, drill) I can mitigate it a little, by charging and warming the batteries on the passengers floor.
It's rare that I need to warm my gas Stihl like that. But it does happen.
Enthusiast III
Advocate III
1965
Advocate I