Bacho Laplander, should i purchase one?

Bushcraft4life

Settler
Dec 31, 2006
865
6
Rochester, Kent
Ok, Bcuk have them in the shop for pretty cheap, up until now i have got away with using a cheap £2.50 mini pruning saw which is quite frankly, rubbish, but it gets the job done, or it did until i broke it, not necessarily my fault, mainly down to it being cheap.

I hear from reviews and feedback they are the dogs danglies, so should i get one?

Any members who have pics please feel free to post them.

:)
 

sharp88

Settler
Aug 18, 2006
649
0
34
Kent
Yes there the best. Iv used 3 other types of folding saw and none compare to the Laplander.

Most folding saws lock, but they don't lock when the blade is closed and the teeth on the laplander are far better than any other -- sharper, smaller and more of them. They make the job all the more easier.

You can also easily get replacement blades for them in the unlikely event that they dull or break.
 

-Switch-

Settler
Jan 16, 2006
845
4
43
Still stuck in Nothingtown...
I've got one and it's very good compared to the other saws I've had.
The blades are tough and I've never heard of anyone breaking one, unlike my Wilkinson Sword folding saw which bent permanently while I was cutting through a small branch.
Bahco do very good saws in general. The hacksaws I use for work are Bahco and I wouldn't use any other.

The only other comparible saw is the PocketBoy (130?) which is also very good, although I've not had much experiance so can't compare the two realisticly.

I'd get the laplander if I were you, then get a nice leather pouch for it too :D
 

sharp88

Settler
Aug 18, 2006
649
0
34
Kent
Silky saws are too expensive. They had Laplanders on amazon last time I looked! Sheaths for Laplanders are easy too make n all.
 

_Geraint_

Member
Feb 8, 2008
48
0
40
Lancashire
Laplanders are chainsaws, you won't regret buying one.

Silky saws are expensive and very heavy and in my opinion it doesn't cut as well as the Laplander.
 

British Red

M.A.B (Mad About Bushcraft)
Dec 30, 2005
26,857
2,100
Mercia
My Silky is lighter than my Laplander - not much in it price wise either (maybe a fiver)

Thee is absolutely nothing wrong with a Laplander - I still use mine frequently and its a very good saw. On balance I prefer the silky - better handle, options in tpi and easier pocket cary (although I have leather belt cases for both - again not much in that).

A sliky will cost about £25 - Laplanders can be had for less so if price is the factor, go Laplander, if quality - its a personal choice

Red
 

Toddy

Mod
Mod
Jan 21, 2005
39,133
4,807
S. Lanarkshire
Another vote for the Laplander, so far mine's been bomb proof and utterly reliable, and it has about 4 years of solid work behind it so far.

cheers,
Toddy
 

Jedadiah

Native
Jan 29, 2007
1,349
1
Northern Doghouse
One thing i will say is that, after much tooing and froing, i bought the orange handled one and i'll tell you for why. Last year at the moot, Tim had a standard green one used it and put it down. We spent 3 hours looking around the camp site for it asi it was a wooded are with twigs and leaves so it was very well camoflaged. If you really do want a green one, buy some hi viz para cord and put a lanyard on it , just so you can find it! :rolleyes:
 

Jedadiah

Native
Jan 29, 2007
1,349
1
Northern Doghouse
Or make a belt sheath - and use it!

Yup, right there mate but Tim and I have been carrying webbing up hill and down dale for over 20 yrs so we try to keep belt kit down to a minimum when 'socialising' :D . Sheath and a pouch or two is all really. Obviously Laplander sheaths are very popular and i for one would not dissmiss them out of hand, just not for me.
 

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