hi All,
New guy to this forum and also to using chainsaws (for the most part).
I recently bought a CS-400. It ran GREAT out of the box (for what I know). I really love the saw. I was cutting some pretty decent sized tree trunks through the summer 18" in diameter at most. After a a while, after say 12 tanks of fuel and 6 or so sharpens it began to cut towards the right. I MAY have bent the bar when one large log jammed up the chain and bar pretty good but it was hard to tell. However, with my hand sharpening (which seemed fairly easy to do), I was beginning to wonder if I sharpening the chain incorrectly causing the curved cut. Regardless, since I knew manager at HDpoh, I was able to swap it out for another new one.
First odd thing about the new one. The bar is silver and the other bar was black. What's up with that??
Secondly, even though it ran great out of the box, after say 6 or so tanks of fuel, and then letting it sit for a month (got busy on other stuff), I have now found that the saw runs TERRIBLE and I really think it is running lean. It really bogs down when I squeeze the throttle after starting. If I ease into it, it will rev decent but ti is very inconsistent. When it settles in and I can rev it on and off ever so gently, when I begin to cut, it bogs down pretty good. While cutting I can ease in to get it up to speed but it just doesn't have the same out of box attitude. Even when I got it up to speed, it seems to just cut TERRIBLE, and as of late, it is hardly cutting at ALL even while revving. I was doing a horizontal cut on a 10 inch oak the other day and the saw half way through the cut just sat there and spun. This is after a sharpen including cutting down rakers a bit.
I have read much here on the CS-400 mods and I am sure we need a carb adjust but when I try to open up the screws a little more to get it to run richer, I find that the H and L screws are already fully open (with limiters).
Questions:
1) What causes the cut to curve? Is it more likely an unbalanced sharpen or possible bent bar? I know I can test that with a new chain, and I will but thought I would ask. If it is my sharpening, I woudl prefer to learn that properly than buy a new chain all the time.
2) How do you KNOW you have sharpened your chain properly? They dull so fast I cannot imagine doing anything other than a hand sharpen every few tanks of fuel.
3) Why did my first saw have a black bar and the second a silver? Different releases of the same model perhaps?
4) Is it typical for the CS-400 to run great out of box and then run like crap and need a carb adjust after a break in?
5) If H and L carb screws and already fully open, and closing them makes things worse, and techs are not allowed to remove limiters, then how the heck can the carb be adjusted so that it runs better (and likely richer).
I am seriously considering doing the limiter mod and perhaps the MM but I want to make sure I am armed with as much info as possible. I would prefer to not void warranty if I don't need to. I am also considering just taking it in for repair under warranty but would like to hear opinions first.
Thank all for your input.
New guy to this forum and also to using chainsaws (for the most part).
I recently bought a CS-400. It ran GREAT out of the box (for what I know). I really love the saw. I was cutting some pretty decent sized tree trunks through the summer 18" in diameter at most. After a a while, after say 12 tanks of fuel and 6 or so sharpens it began to cut towards the right. I MAY have bent the bar when one large log jammed up the chain and bar pretty good but it was hard to tell. However, with my hand sharpening (which seemed fairly easy to do), I was beginning to wonder if I sharpening the chain incorrectly causing the curved cut. Regardless, since I knew manager at HDpoh, I was able to swap it out for another new one.
First odd thing about the new one. The bar is silver and the other bar was black. What's up with that??
Secondly, even though it ran great out of the box, after say 6 or so tanks of fuel, and then letting it sit for a month (got busy on other stuff), I have now found that the saw runs TERRIBLE and I really think it is running lean. It really bogs down when I squeeze the throttle after starting. If I ease into it, it will rev decent but ti is very inconsistent. When it settles in and I can rev it on and off ever so gently, when I begin to cut, it bogs down pretty good. While cutting I can ease in to get it up to speed but it just doesn't have the same out of box attitude. Even when I got it up to speed, it seems to just cut TERRIBLE, and as of late, it is hardly cutting at ALL even while revving. I was doing a horizontal cut on a 10 inch oak the other day and the saw half way through the cut just sat there and spun. This is after a sharpen including cutting down rakers a bit.
I have read much here on the CS-400 mods and I am sure we need a carb adjust but when I try to open up the screws a little more to get it to run richer, I find that the H and L screws are already fully open (with limiters).
Questions:
1) What causes the cut to curve? Is it more likely an unbalanced sharpen or possible bent bar? I know I can test that with a new chain, and I will but thought I would ask. If it is my sharpening, I woudl prefer to learn that properly than buy a new chain all the time.
2) How do you KNOW you have sharpened your chain properly? They dull so fast I cannot imagine doing anything other than a hand sharpen every few tanks of fuel.
3) Why did my first saw have a black bar and the second a silver? Different releases of the same model perhaps?
4) Is it typical for the CS-400 to run great out of box and then run like crap and need a carb adjust after a break in?
5) If H and L carb screws and already fully open, and closing them makes things worse, and techs are not allowed to remove limiters, then how the heck can the carb be adjusted so that it runs better (and likely richer).
I am seriously considering doing the limiter mod and perhaps the MM but I want to make sure I am armed with as much info as possible. I would prefer to not void warranty if I don't need to. I am also considering just taking it in for repair under warranty but would like to hear opinions first.
Thank all for your input.