Was actually surprised that it is about right!I could be wrong but I suspect you are going to find that the RPM on the 6400 is quite a bit less than you expect. Mine ran great before tuning and cut just fine. I was surprised to find that WOT was only about 11000 when not in wood. I couldn't leave that much RPM laying on the table so I had to mess with the saw. Without the tach I would have been just fine and happy with the factory settings.
Got the tachometer today , it's a cheap (possibly over payed) china product!
Even though the manual says to wrap the wire 3 times around the spark plug lead , it actually seems to work by just being leaned against the hood above the spark plug.
For apparent reasons , taking pictures , I opted to use the wrap around method!
Being impatient and curious I had to go play with my saws , at least a little bit.
Firstly I checked the rpm's on my fully stock , factory tuned Dolmar PS-6400:
Idle ~3300 rpm seemed a bit much so I turned the "S" screw about 1/3 counterclockwise and the PS6400 settled at a little below 3000.
WOT looks nice enough so I left it as is , especially considering that I really like how this beauty cuts wood set up like this!
Then I turned to my PS7900 , bare in mind that she is way out of tune.
Idle rpm was around 3000 rpm and WOT was meager 10900 rpm.
Considering I did a muffler mod on Monday (more about it in one of my next posts) I first re-tuned the "L" needle (had to go counterclockwise) which caused a rise in idle rpm.
After tuning idle I went for WOT - had to turn the "H" needle in (clockwise) quite a lot and called it a day when I reached about 13k.
Final results without actually cutting any wood are below , I think they are OK (idle / WOT).
Couldn't test rpm's under load as I have nothing to cut in nor around my yard , but as soon as I get an opportunity I will test that as well!
A tachometer like this is an interesting toy to have , I am already considering buying another one and permanently instal one on each saw - just for fun.
Now , for all of You to take a laugh at me if You want to - testing rpm's on my saws I encountered some unforeseen issue!
Checking the rpm's on my PS6400 went great , wrapped the tach's cable around the spark plug lead 3 or 4 times , put the hood back on and started her up. Let her warm a bit using the opportunity to tune idle down , then checked WOT - all fine.
Then I obviously turned to my PS7900 , set the tach up and gave her a start:
- choke+half throttle , third pull she sounds off
- pushed the choke in , automatic half throttle still on , she turns over blowing thick white smoke on the 2nd pull
- I give the throttle a tick to release automatic half throttle , she dies
- tried starting her up for about 5-10 minutes , got 2-3 sounds out of her but she didn't wanna run
- unscrewed the spark plug twice , thought she might be flooded , spark plug wasn't dry , but then it wasn't dripping wet either , checked whether there is a spark , yes there is
- @ that point I already got a little mad/furious , started to wonder what might be wrong and most things seemed highly unlikely considering the saw worked fine on Monday testing my muffler mod
Has any of You ever seen a light bulb glowing atop of Your head like it's being portrayed in cartoons or really stupid comedies?
Well , I did today when I thought "what if there is no fuel in the tank" , and guess what there wasn't!
750mL of fuel poured into the tank and the saw worked just fine!
Who knew a chain saw needs occasionally being re-fueled?! LOL