A fine choice , and certainly much safer than anything else.You might consider using a bandsaw.
Found a lightly used Homelite 16" model UT43123 this morning, all of the paint/markings on the bar was still on, the teeth felt sharp to my finger tip. Build time frame was early 2020 based on markings I found inside one of the covers. It started spinning the chain when I tried at the sellers house, even had the owners manual. LOLBought a 110Volt AC Homelite 16" about 12 - 15 years ago from Home Depot. Never had any issue with it uses lots of chain oil. Had to sharpen the chain a couple of times. Use it mainly for trimming but have cut down about a dozen trees of various size with it cuts very well plenty of power. Not sure they are being made anymore. Model is UT43122. Very happy with it.
Mike
On the advice of a good friend that runs a saw far more than I ever hope I have to I purchased one of these.I don't think it matters. I'd avoid battery unless I need the portability because I've got too many different batteries and chargers now. Battery does work briefly with the power lines down but so does gasoline. I did find that keeping a dozen chains in the rotation and not trying to drive a short dull chain with a fractional horse electric was worth the nuisance value.
Mike, I chickened out buying the mini saws, To concerned about the battery issue from past experience. I just bought the Makita 18v 10" saw (have lots of the 18v tools too, havent used it yet) thinking it could not weigh that much... Hah... I may just cut the peach trees off at the ground problem solved!! Think I could of bought and replace several mini saws for what the Makita cost with out battery... Let me know how it does pruning please, I am getting to slow at dodging falling trimmings thought a small one handed saw would allow the other hand to deflect or control, it did not feel that heavy in the box.Just picked up a Saker 4" Mini Electric (one handed) Chain Saw with an extra battery pack. Perfect for liming my fruit trees. Curious how long the battery packs will last.
Got a Ryobi 4 stroke gas poll trimmer attachment for the high stuff and a bush trimmer. Don't get used much but fire up every time.
Only thing about battery powered tools is the battery life. Cordless drill battery packs don't seem to last very long and replacement batteries usually cost more than the drill motor alone.
I'm on my third coil in two Stihls. PITA changing them all the time but that's usually the fix to a hard starter.I'm tired of fighting my temperamental Stihl, damn thing only starts when it wants to. I am looking at the larger Makita rechargeable. Bought the Makita rechargeable weed eater last year and have had no problems with it. A plus is they will both use the same batteries.