max2cam
ArboristSite Guru
Say I'm making a long sustained cut -- either milling or sawing up a big log. Is there any cooling/lubrication advantage to closing the throttle periodically and then resuming the WOT cut?
Of course one would take the bar out of contact with the wood when doing this so there is not a heavy load when going back to WOT.
The reason I bring this up is for two reasons: 1) The first time I ever used a chainsaw was a rental unit and the guy told me to throttle down like that while cutting. 2) In old Harley-Davidson operator manuals it says the same thing: To periodically close the throttle when running at high speed to draw additional oil to the piston and cylinder.
Would this also be true when running a 2-stroke chainsaw engine? Throttling down in long sustained cuts would draw cool fresh charge around the piston plus a momentary break of the hot combustion process?
I'm not saying this is true or a good practice, but wondering what you guys think...
Of course one would take the bar out of contact with the wood when doing this so there is not a heavy load when going back to WOT.
The reason I bring this up is for two reasons: 1) The first time I ever used a chainsaw was a rental unit and the guy told me to throttle down like that while cutting. 2) In old Harley-Davidson operator manuals it says the same thing: To periodically close the throttle when running at high speed to draw additional oil to the piston and cylinder.
Would this also be true when running a 2-stroke chainsaw engine? Throttling down in long sustained cuts would draw cool fresh charge around the piston plus a momentary break of the hot combustion process?
I'm not saying this is true or a good practice, but wondering what you guys think...