I've been cutting deadfalls on jeep/motorcycle/snowmobile trails on sunny days where the temperature in the shade is 75 degrees F. In the sun, it is much hotter, but I don't know what temperature. I had my MS201T and my 500i both get hot enought to boil the fuel in their tanks and refuse to start. My ancient McCulloch mini-mac does the same thing in the summertime as well. It gets so hot that it will boil fuel in the tank and refuse to start. Sometimes, when it has begun to get too hot, I am able to start it by adjusting the choke to be about 3/4 on and pulling the starter cord repeatedly until it fires. Then by simultaneously manipulating the choke and the throttle, I can get the RPM's up in the high range, where the fan seems to pull enough air to cool the engine enough to run properly for a few more cuts. Eventually, the saw will refuse to start and I have to let it cool down for quite a while.
Yesterday, for the second day in a row, the 500i became balky and would not start because it became too hot. With no choke to set on the saw, I thought about how the fuel primer bulb works to pump fuel through the fueling system and I thought maybe if I repeated pressed the primer bulb, it would flush cooler fuel through the fuel system and enable starting.
This turned out to be the solution to my hot start problems in the 500i. I thought I might be flooding it, but that was not the case. I would press the bulb 3 or more times, sometime 6 times, and then I could start the 500i and use it.
The MS201T does not have a choke to adjust either, just the small lever on the control handle, which one rotates back, locks in the "start" position and then pull the cord to start. I suspect it is actually moving a choke plate in the carburetor, but I've never had the saw a part to verify that. I attempted to manipulate the small lever as if it were a choke, but was unable to get the 201T to fire, gave up, and put it aside. When I got home later in the day, both saws started fine once they were cool.
Just wondering what other 500i and MS201T users have experienced with hot start situations and is there a way to get the MS201T to start when it is hot?
Yesterday, for the second day in a row, the 500i became balky and would not start because it became too hot. With no choke to set on the saw, I thought about how the fuel primer bulb works to pump fuel through the fueling system and I thought maybe if I repeated pressed the primer bulb, it would flush cooler fuel through the fuel system and enable starting.
This turned out to be the solution to my hot start problems in the 500i. I thought I might be flooding it, but that was not the case. I would press the bulb 3 or more times, sometime 6 times, and then I could start the 500i and use it.
The MS201T does not have a choke to adjust either, just the small lever on the control handle, which one rotates back, locks in the "start" position and then pull the cord to start. I suspect it is actually moving a choke plate in the carburetor, but I've never had the saw a part to verify that. I attempted to manipulate the small lever as if it were a choke, but was unable to get the 201T to fire, gave up, and put it aside. When I got home later in the day, both saws started fine once they were cool.
Just wondering what other 500i and MS201T users have experienced with hot start situations and is there a way to get the MS201T to start when it is hot?