Hello,
I set my saw up so that as soon as I start cutting the engine "cleans up" and sounds really crisp. If its not in the cut I have it rich enough to burble. The best way to hear the change that the saw makes is to fire it up and get the high setting very rich. The saw will run poorly and sound rather rough. Start bringing the Hi screw in and the revs will come up and eventually you will find max revs and the engine sound will clean up. DO NOT set it for max revs! From the clean sounding max RPM as you turn the Hi screw out the engine note will make a distinctive change. That change is when the saw gets rich enough to start four stroking. At this point your fairly close to where you need to be. If in doubt make it a fuzz richer. your clue to being way too rich is the saw will try to four stroke in the cut. As soon as you start cutting the engine should clean up and sound crisp. If it still sounds rough you are way too rich. To my knowledge rich only fouls plugs and mufflers. I don't think that rich will cause any real engine trouble with in reason.
True story here. This fall I was helping a bunch of coworkers clear out a bunch of elm trees. One of them drug along their 372xp Husqvarna or something like that. They fried it cutting up this massive stump from not setting the carb for conditions. I had to fire up my PP 295 to finish the job because it had the longest bar on a running saw. I ran several tank fulls through the poulan at wide open throttle cutting this thing up. Thats wide open for and entire tank of fuel, not ever letting off. This stump was Huge! I set my carb up for the conditions of the day and keep and ear to it in case something changes. Talking with the guy later on I found out that he just stuck a replacement carb on it and ran it, never turning an adjustment screw. Somehow the carb was set close enough to at least run. He got away with it cutting up at high elevation but at 4,000Ft it killed his saw. DON'T let them run lean and you'll be good to go.