About Pinkway
Capable chainsaws priced for the rest of us.
Pinkway was started around a simple observation: a lot of people who need a chainsaw can't justify dropping $500+ on one. Homeowners with a few trees, hobby farmers, weekend firewood cutters, DIYers dealing with storm cleanup — they don't cut all day, but when they need a saw, they need one that works.
Rental shops charge $50–$80 a day for a saw that's been beaten on. We build a brand-new 63cc saw with a 20" bar and a fresh chain for the cost of that one-day rental, and you get to keep it.
The Lineup
The 63cc platform comes in five SKUs (63CC-K, 63CC-G, 63ACE, 63ACG, 63ACK) — same engine, 3.5 HP at 8500 RPM, different finishes and bar configurations. The 63CC-K and 63CC-G dual-bar kits ship with both 18" and 20" bars plus two chains. If you're cutting bigger rounds, the 20" bar handles it; if you're limbing, swap to the 18".
The 26CC top-handle saw (26ACC) is a different animal — lighter, one-hand capable, built for pruning and tree work where you need to reach without hauling a full-size saw.
The Honest Pitch
This isn't a Stihl MS 271. It isn't a Husqvarna 455 Rancher. It's a budget saw. What it does have: a fuel-efficient 2-cycle engine that starts cleanly, an auto chain oiler that saves you from forgetting, an anti-vibration grip that keeps your hands from going numb, and a low-kickback chain that's appropriate for non-pro users.
Pro saw owners keep Pinkways around for rough work they don't want to abuse their main saw doing. Farmers throw one in the pickup bed. First-time owners use them for years and upgrade later if they start cutting for a living.
Where We Sell
Every Pinkway chainsaw is sold through Amazon. That keeps distribution simple, warranty handling straightforward, and shipping fast via Prime. This site is an independent information hub — product details, spec comparisons, real customer reviews, and a starting guide — for people researching before they click buy.