Canyon Angler
Addicted to ArboristSite
Hey, all,
I have a saw that's acting real weird. I've had it for 12 years or so since new, and it's never missed a beat.
Three years ago, the primer bulb cracked, but I kept using it, using choke exclusively to start it, and it has worked fine for three years using it that way.
This year I opened up the muffler some to try to get more power, and re-tuned the carb, and had my tune checked by a good saw guy, who replaced the primer bulb. Since then, the saw has been giving me fits.
Sometimes it will start fine, and idle fine, and work just as it always did.
Other times, when I start it, it sounds like it's running WAY too rich, as if it was loading up with excess fuel with the choke on (but the choke is off), and it won't come up to speed. BUT if I push the primer bulb while trying to get it to rev up, it will SCREAM (sounds like a "lean scream") ... which leads me to believe that even when I push the primer bulb, it's still not getting enough fuel. And it still won't idle, or not usually. But sometimes it idles like a champ. Temperature of air and chainsaw doesn't seem to affect this.
I should probably note that my saw mechanic said I had the saw too rich, and he leaned it out. I've had good success tuning other saws by ear and with tach – my saw guy said I had my 660 tuned just the way he would tune it after I muffler-modded it – but when I took this particular saw to him to check my tune, he said I had it too rich. (I thought I had it too lean, because if you held the throttle open for 5-10 seconds, the RPMs just kept increasing and increasing, as if it seemed to want to run away, no matter how rich I set the HS screw.)
I ordered a pressure/vacuum tester from Amazon, but in the meantime, can you folks give me any guidance on what to look at? Does this sound like it might be an air leak? Clogged up passages in the carb? (I will probably rebuild carb when I take it apart to test for vacuum/pressure leaks.) The fuel filter is new, the air filter is clean, and I've always been pretty careful to use good fresh fuel with no ethanol, and to run it dry when storing it.
Saw is a top-handle Dolmar PS-3410TH. Thanks in advance...
I have a saw that's acting real weird. I've had it for 12 years or so since new, and it's never missed a beat.
Three years ago, the primer bulb cracked, but I kept using it, using choke exclusively to start it, and it has worked fine for three years using it that way.
This year I opened up the muffler some to try to get more power, and re-tuned the carb, and had my tune checked by a good saw guy, who replaced the primer bulb. Since then, the saw has been giving me fits.
Sometimes it will start fine, and idle fine, and work just as it always did.
Other times, when I start it, it sounds like it's running WAY too rich, as if it was loading up with excess fuel with the choke on (but the choke is off), and it won't come up to speed. BUT if I push the primer bulb while trying to get it to rev up, it will SCREAM (sounds like a "lean scream") ... which leads me to believe that even when I push the primer bulb, it's still not getting enough fuel. And it still won't idle, or not usually. But sometimes it idles like a champ. Temperature of air and chainsaw doesn't seem to affect this.
I should probably note that my saw mechanic said I had the saw too rich, and he leaned it out. I've had good success tuning other saws by ear and with tach – my saw guy said I had my 660 tuned just the way he would tune it after I muffler-modded it – but when I took this particular saw to him to check my tune, he said I had it too rich. (I thought I had it too lean, because if you held the throttle open for 5-10 seconds, the RPMs just kept increasing and increasing, as if it seemed to want to run away, no matter how rich I set the HS screw.)
I ordered a pressure/vacuum tester from Amazon, but in the meantime, can you folks give me any guidance on what to look at? Does this sound like it might be an air leak? Clogged up passages in the carb? (I will probably rebuild carb when I take it apart to test for vacuum/pressure leaks.) The fuel filter is new, the air filter is clean, and I've always been pretty careful to use good fresh fuel with no ethanol, and to run it dry when storing it.
Saw is a top-handle Dolmar PS-3410TH. Thanks in advance...