100 to 1 is thin!It was saber, says 100:1 right on the bottle. I could be wrong but it seemed thin to me.
100 to 1 is thin!It was saber, says 100:1 right on the bottle. I could be wrong but it seemed thin to me.
That's a hell of a test they did!The label says it was tested and proven at 100:1 but doesn’t say you have to use it at that ratio.
The test was done on an Echo string trimmer which was turning probably half the RPM of some chain saws
I saw part of that test. Alot of land scaping guys on the other forum say they use it at 100:1 in their trimmers and blowers and like it, but there is no way I would do it in any of my stuff.That's a hell of a test they did!
I'm confused by it. 2 stroke bikes that are constantly "on the pipe" or in the upper rpms (like a chainsaw wide open), need oil in the mix. 80cc and 125cc bikes are run on 32:1, even with 250cc bikes it is very common. Bigger bore bikes like 300cc and 500cc bikes are ok at 40:1 and higher because they tend to get lugged around more. Saws need oil too, 32:1 and 40:1.Is anyone else confused by this? You're saying both are operating in the upper powerband under load but bikes can have a higher oil ratio?
I maybe wrong about how thick it is, it's been a while since I used it but I remember it being thicker than the stihl premix I have now, which pours like water and a little thicker than the lucas I use in the bike.It was saber, says 100:1 right on the bottle. I could be wrong but it seemed thin to me.
I for one do not like breathing smoke! Anyone ever consider your lungs?
What do you think the mixture screws on a saw carb are for if not rejetting ?I’m leary of the husky pre mix at 50-1. I add husky two stroke oil to the 50-1 pre mix can. At 40-1 that’s as far as I go. I’d rather foul a spark plug than buy new parts. A dirtbike can be rejetted to a change in pre mix a chain saw can’t be rejetted.
There is 100-1 optimal two stroke oil but never tried it.
Yeah it is confusing now that read it out again, essentially what I was trying to say is chainsaws operate under direct load to the engine at 9-10k+ rpm where bikes have different gearing in the transmission and aren't always run wide open all the time like a chainsaw.Is anyone else confused by this? You're saying both are operating in the upper powerband under load but bikes can have a higher oil ratio?
Ive used it it everything i own for 15 years. Backpack blower with hundreds of tanks throught it, trimmers, saws, diesel engine oil for my volkswagen, regular engine oil in my work trucks. No problems here. Run any mix at 100:1 and it will not work out well. It does get old tho, guys talkin **** about amsoil like it banged your old lady. Lol.The Amsoil camp guys are quit on this subject anyway , most of the time you put snake oil in something , the snake will bit you
6 years here I'm a Tree Service run it in everything never had a failure! Works fine I trust it!Ive used it it everything i own for 15 years. Backpack blower with hundreds of tanks throught it, trimmers, saws, diesel engine oil for my volkswagen, regular engine oil in my work trucks. No problems here. Run any mix at 100:1 and it will not work out well. It does get old tho, guys talkin **** about amsoil like it banged your old lady. Lol.
Ive used it it everything i own for 15 years. Backpack blower with hundreds of tanks throught it, trimmers, saws, diesel engine oil for my volkswagen, regular engine oil in my work trucks. No problems here. Run any mix at 100:1 and it will not work out well. It does get old tho, guys talkin **** about amsoil like it banged your old lady. Lol.
Ive seen it work at 80:1 for a long time. I spent about 15 years between two different golf courses, both mechanics ran nothing but amsoil 80:1 in all their stuff. Not one scored cylinder. Im not gonna do it in my equipment but ive seen it first hand. Not to mention the OP admitted he was using his cell phone to tune it while listening to music, more likely to me is he toasted his saw all by himself.Who is it that is making the 100:1 claim? it's Amsoil isn't it. Puts them in the Shamwow category in my opinion. You and many others are smart enough to dismiss that claim but how many have blindly followed them down that path?
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Yeah it is confusing now that read it out again, essentially what I was trying to say is chainsaws operate under direct load to the engine at 9-10k+ rpm where bikes have different gearing in the transmission and aren't always run wide open all the time like a chainsaw.
Dirt bikes motors out perform chain saw motors in the neighbor hood of 1000% or more. A typical 80cc motor can yield 30 HP. Ask me how I know. I have seen 50 and 60cc motors also yield that much. We are not talking about setup that your grandchild would be learning to ride on, but full on race set ups. Two stroke motors on dirt bikes are a thing of the past because of EPA standards. If any one has been in to or watched a GP race you understand that those motors had to perform at full throttles for long periods of time. The Baja 1000 is about endurance for long periods of time. Dirt bikes became very sophisticated and performed well unlike chainsaws. Thanks
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