🌳 Cut Above the Rest — Reach, Power, and Precision in One Pole!
The Fiskars 7-16 ft Extendable 2-in-1 Pruner and Pole Saw combines a lightweight telescoping aluminum pole with chain-drive technology to effortlessly trim branches up to 1.25 inches thick. Featuring a hardened steel blade with a low-friction coating and an ergonomic oval fiberglass handle, it ensures durability, precision, and comfort. Designed for professional-grade garden maintenance, it comes with a lifetime warranty for lasting reliability.
Brand | Fiskars |
Color | Orange |
Blade Material | Steel |
Surface Recommendation | Wood |
Power Source | Hand Powered |
Special Feature | Brake |
Included Components | Tree Puner |
Product Dimensions | 8"L x 2"W x 81"H |
Warranty Type | Lifetime |
Item Weight | 5.56 Ounces |
Blade Length | 15 Inches |
Number of Teeth | 9 |
Blade Shape | Hook |
UPC | 046561808006 046561808020 |
Manufacturer | Fiskars Garden |
Part Number | 394731-1002 |
Item Weight | 5.6 ounces |
Item model number | 394731-1002 |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Size | 7-16 ft Chain Drive |
Style | Pole Saw & Pruner |
Material | Chain Drive |
Pattern | Pole Saw & Pruner |
Item Package Quantity | 1 |
Maximum Weight Capacity | 6 Pounds |
Special Features | Brake |
Batteries Included? | No |
Batteries Required? | No |
Warranty Description | Lifetime warranty |
T**E
Great garden tool for reaching hard to reach branches!
This Fiskars extended lopper is a very well-designed tool for reaching branches that I could not reach with my pole saw or small pruners or anything else I tried. You can get quite a bit of leverage with the pulling mechanism and I was able to cut small branches with ease.There was a branch on the tree in my backyard shooting straight up into the sky at the highest point. I've been trying to get to that branch for months. I finally got it with this long lopper!I highly recommend this tool for hard to reach branches in your yard and garden.
P**!
Really cool
This is a pricey tool, but totally worth it. It's in my top 5 fun tools for me in my garage. Once you get the hang of it, you can breeze up a tree in minutes. Wear some thick gloves to manage some of the snapping of the pull ends, but it is really not anything close to being as bad as the one big reviewer makes it sound. The hardest part is carrying the branches up because you have so many after using this. Just buy it, you won't regret it.
T**N
Great design
This thing is the best manual pole style pruner out there. This has way better cutting power than other ones I've tried and my favorite thing about it is the unique chain/belt action. Others brands use a rope and pulley system to connect the handle to the blade and that style always get caught on branches or slips from the pulleys, which is a major headache.
B**Y
Good for light pruning.
It works well on small branches. I wouldn't use this on heavy jobs. As other reviews have stated when you are cutting high branches it is difficult to see where the pruner is.
E**C
Better than rope versions
This pole pruner leaves others in the dust. The length can be adjusted very quickly from branch to branch. No more rope issues like tangling, being too far away, or short / long, and an adjustable cutting head. All very convenient.
A**T
Wish they still made it
This is no longer manufactured. If you’re lucky enough to find one, buy it. It’s a bit pricey but it’s worth every penny. The new models don’t come close.
R**D
Quality light weight pruners.
Versatile light weight pruners. Quality made from Fiskars.
D**S
This is currently my favorite tool, but somehow I also hate it.
The 50% of the time the cut goes off without any malfunction is amazing. The other half of the time, you are:1) getting pinched by an angry plastic knob that flails around2) untwisting the ribbon from around the pole, which a causes a jam3) reattaching the bottom cone piece, because you need to take it off to untwist the ribbon4) reattaching the bottom cone piece, because once you take it off it falls off every 3 or 4 cuts5) slamming the pump handle into your hand when you pull the knob, because the best places to hold the pole are right in the line of fire. That's another different kind of pinch. The type that just makes you angry; where you yell the F word at the top of your lungs.6) unjamming the sticks of virtually any size from 1 cm up to 1 inch that regularly go sideways and lodge between the blades, regardless of sharpening the blade, tightening the blades, and practicing7) scrambling to catch a falling pole when you make a cut right at the limit of the range of the stik, because the only place you can hold it is on the very bottom of the pole, otherwise the pump slams into your hand- and your other hand is pulling the knob. As soon as the stick is cut, the pole starts to fall. If you reach with the hand that was pulling the cord, the plastic knob will zip up and hit or pinch your other hand, if you reach with the only hand that was on the pole already, then you are almost performing a juggling act, and something will go wrong.I think the best thing Fiskars can do with this product is somehow attach a tiny webcam to it and constantly stream little tiktok clips of people getting hurt or getting really mad. I'm think after every time I get hurt by this pruning stik, the one thing that might make me feel better would be seeing a little video of it hurting someone else.I was actually looking for the 5' Fiskar's pruning stick but I only found this longer one. Longer must be better right? Wrong. Here are the absolutely major failures compared to their shorter product which has the exact same pruning shears and ribbon & bike chain operating hardware.1) The ribbon (it's not a rope! a flat rope is not the same thing as a ribbon!) is on the outside of the stick. It was on the inside of the stick on the other model. I get it, they probably did that so it wouldn't interfere with the telescoping extension piece. Now it interferes with multiple other things instead.2) Careful where you put your hand if you get a good grip and your hand is over the ribbon, you could get a ribbon burn on your hand when you try and cut, or you might get lucky and merely prevent the product from working effectively.3) Also watch out for wayward sticks or debris, things will get stuck in the ribbon.4) the section of the ribbon running from the pump action grip down to the pull cord likes to start getting twisted around the pole and it will get stuck- you will have to remove the end piece to untangle this.5) The pump grip and the pull cord are now synchronized in tandem on this model- meaning when you pull the cord it also moves the pump grip down the pole and vice versa- pumping the grip gives slack to the pull cord and it will flop around. On the 5' model these two methods of pruning were independent of each other, which worked WAY better. Pumping the grip wouldn't send a floppy hard plastic knob falling out of the bottom of the pole trying to find the right place to smack you so it will optimize the pain. And conversely, pulling the knob doesn't send the pump grip crashing into your other hand, making a fair effort to score a blood blister on that flap of skin between your thumb and index finger. Does that little piece of webbed hand have a name? It is pruner-averse for sure.6) because the pump and knob cord work the same mechanism, watch out where you put your hand! When trying to get to the furthest lengths you can, you will put one hand on the pole near the bottom and then pull the knob with the other hand- only the pump grip will come crashing into your hand when you do, preventing the cut, pinching your hand and possibly causing you to drop the pruner. And if it lands wrong, that pole WILL bend out of shape.7) When cutting with the cord and pull knob, do not let go of that knob after the cut like you're starting a lawnmower. It it will flail around and retract into the bottom of the pole until it smashes a finger or hand that may be in the wrong place at the wrong time. I'm torn about which one hurts worse: the knob smack or the pump grip collision. I'm; thinking the pump grip collision.So here is the TL;DR: don't get this thing. Fiskars always had choice gear at the store and for prizes or demos. I am going to see about other things I can get that aren't crazy battery expensive . I am almost certain there are at least 1 and possibly 2 or 3 things that I forgot to mention, but this review is long enough and my anger-typing-cramps are pretty bad. Cheers.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
5 days ago