Why do people still refure to W as in 30W as weight, when it's notThat was back when they ran 30 weight oil... 40:1 will be fine with the new oils
Good point. Most don't know it means "winter."Why do people still refure to W as in 30W as weight, when it's not![]()
I had been running everything from the 1950s to present with 50:1 but recently went to 40:1 just to be safe. 16:1 will help keep mosquitos away.I have my grandfathers pioneer p20 I understand they were made from 73-76 getting mixed information on fuel mixture originally it was 16 to 1 what mixture is safe to use?
the old saws ran with much more carbon deposit than any modern saw, they would need "decoking" regular if looked after, a word you dont hear these days, probable because oils have come on such a long way and keeps the ports clean, personally I think if you run a very old saw thats only been run on a mixture like 16/1 then stored and forgot about, could soon be ruined if its suddenly run on a modern oil at 50/1 it will soon be cleaning all that hard carbon and your nice piston that has lasted years could now be wrecked when bits break off and score everything that shouldnt be scored. Thats just my way of thinking I am sure some will disagree but thats life. Treat old tools with respect, some have lasted longer than a lot who post here so look after them and they will last many more years, dont expect them to compete with the likes of a 500i !! modern saws are a totally different league.I had been running everything from the 1950s to present with 50:1 but recently went to 40:1 just to be safe. 16:1 will help keep mosquitos away.
Understood. These are saws that have been completely disassembled, cleaned and rebuilt so no carbon. I do check them periodically and have seen no damage or excess wear.the old saws ran with much more carbon deposit than any modern saw, they would need "decoking" regular if looked after, a word you dont hear these days, probable because oils have come on such a long way and keeps the ports clean, personally I think if you run a very old saw thats only been run on a mixture like 16/1 then stored and forgot about, could soon be ruined if its suddenly run on a modern oil at 50/1 it will soon be cleaning all that hard carbon and your nice piston that has lasted years could now be wrecked when bits break off and score everything that shouldnt be scored. Thats just my way of thinking I am sure some will disagree but thats life. Treat old tools with respect, some have lasted longer than a lot who post here so look after them and they will last many more years, dont expect them to compete with the likes of a 500i !! modern saws are a totally different league.