Back in August of 2024, I wrote about buying an electric chainsaw for the first time. It was a Father’s Day present for my dad, who has several acres of property to manage and is reaching the point where even his dad strength isn’t enough to hand saw all day. I wasn’t quite sure what to expect from the current state of electric chainsaws, but I was excited to put the new machine to work. Fast forward a full year, and I’ve got an update: we’ve abused the heck out of it – and it’s still going strong!
Over the past 12 months, this Ego Power+ 18-inch 56-volt electric chainsaw has seen more wood than a mom-and-pop lumber mill. I’ve cut through your standard backyard trees, gnarly old branches, telephone poles, construction lumber, and plenty of 2x4s.
We’ve basically started treating it like a general-purpose tool. If anything is fiber-based and currently of a size that is larger than it should be, the standard response is “go grab the chainsaw…”.
And not just on nice sunny days either – this saw’s been dragged through rain, dust, and mud. And more than once it’s been used in situations that absolutely should have killed it: fully underwater.


At my parents’ place, a good-sized tree had fallen into their lake after the last big storm and needed to be cleared out. We had been putting it off due to the size of the thing, but the water level was rising, and soon it was going to be swamped. One of the most recent times I went over to visit my parents, my dad and I decided it was time to finally tackle the job. Unfortunately, by then the water had risen to the point where the tree trunk was already half-submerged, creating a navigational hazard for all the weird little electric boats I’ve dropped in that lake.
We started by trying to just cut the exposed portion, and I figured we’d then put a long line on the UTV and see if we couldn’t just break the rest of it free. But that’s where my dad’s more hours on the saw than mine played a key role: knowing he could keep pushing it. My dad waded in with the chainsaw and absolutely went to town. He had that thing so deep in the water, cutting through the massive trunk that if it had been a gas-powered chainsaw, it would have literally needed a snorkel to keep running.
And yet, it worked. Not just worked – it powered through. We pulled it out, dried it off, and then it was on to the next job.

The battery life has stayed impressive, the power is still solid, and the chain hasn’t even needed a replacement yet (though I should probably give it a sharpening one of these days). I’ve lost count of how many logs this thing has ripped through, and it’s never let me down.
There is one minor downside worth mentioning: the chain tensioner has gotten a bit stiff. It used to adjust nice and easy, but now it takes a little more effort to tighten. It still works, but you’ve got to put a bit of muscle into it. That’s literally the only wear-and-tear issue I’ve noticed after a full year of borderline tool abuse.
I expected an electric chainsaw to be a convenient, eco-friendly option for light-duty work. What I didn’t expect was a rugged, waterproof (apparently), do-it-all beast that could handle nearly anything I threw at it.
So here’s the one-year verdict: I bought an electric chainsaw, I used it for everything I possibly could (and some things I probably shouldn’t have), and it still works like a champ. If you’re wondering whether an electric chainsaw can hold up over time – this one has more than proven itself.
And if I ever buy a second one, I’ll try to keep it out of the pond. No promises, though.
Author’s note: On reading through this again to proofread, it almost sounds like an ad, but I promise it’s not (those have big “Sponsored” labels on them and I generally steer clear of those). This is just a chainsaw I bought for my dad and we’ve been thrilled with it one year later.

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