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Chainsaw Shop | Greasy Beaver
Chainsaw Shop

Saws, Sharpening & Shop Shenanigans

Chainsaw repair, sharpening, bars, chains, tuning, setup, and modification work for the saws that earn their keep.

Chainsaw Work

From basic maintenance to cranky saws that refuse to act right, Greasy Beaver helps keep saws sharp, running, and ready for work.

Chainsaw Repair

No-start issues, hard starting, bogging, fuel problems, carb concerns, air leaks, pull-start issues, oiling problems, and general repair work.

Sharpening & Chain Work

Chain sharpening, chain replacement, bar checks, bar and chain matching, cutting issues, and helping keep your saw cutting instead of chewing.

Saw Setup

Help with bars, chains, sprockets, tune, fuel/oil basics, and setting up saws for the kind of work they are actually doing.

Performance & Mods

Saw modification work may be available depending on the saw, condition, parts, intended use, and whether the project makes sense.

Used Saws & Parts

When available, Greasy Beaver may have used saws, bars, chains, and parts. Availability changes and compatibility should always be checked.

Work Saws Matter

A saw that starts, oils, cuts, and holds tune is not a luxury. It is part of the job. We respect that.

Saw Bros

Saw Bros is the saw-focused side of the family — built around chainsaws, saw work, sharp chains, loud little beasts, and the kind of saw culture that belongs in the woods, not in a glass case.

Chainsaw-Focused

Saw Bros will be the place for saw repair, saw sales, modification work, saw gear, and all the sharp-toothed nonsense that makes saw people smile.

Coming Soon

The Saw Bros website still needs built, but this button will point there once it is ready to leave the shop and cause trouble.

Still Greasy Beaver Approved

Greasy Beaver handles the mechanic side. Saw Bros will give the chainsaw side its own place to growl.

Before You Bring a Saw

The more information you send, the faster we can figure out where to start.

Send the Basics

Brand, model, symptoms, what fuel mix you use, when it last ran right, and what happened before it started acting up.

Send Pictures

Pictures of the saw, model tag, bar, chain, clutch side, fuel cap area, and anything broken or missing are helpful.

Be Honest

If it was straight-gassed, run over, dropped out of a tree, loaned to a cousin, or “fixed” with a screwdriver and hope, just tell us. 😂

Saw rule: Sharp chains and proper setup save time, fuel, frustration, and unnecessary abuse on the saw.