Just went thru every post in this thread WOW
Interesting stuff happens around here don't it?
Chainsaws are a just a fad though..........
I still like to smoke a Monte Cristo when sawing.
Any new developments in dealing with the HD199 issues? I see these saws on CL often and would like to be able to fix the 'carburetor issues' (that are often mentioned in the listing descriptions) if I buy one to 'fix and flip'...opcorn:
Any chance the nozzle is the issue? Easy fix. http://www.arboristsite.com/chainsaw/145468.htm
Some real good troubleshooting here to find out where you're problem lies.
http://www.walbro.com/media/21936/SERVICEMANUAL.pdf
Any chance the nozzle is the issue? Easy fix.
I too am going out on a limb. But, consider tech time on the fix. Would it be worth it to just replace the carb? I don't know. Just asking.
Since this thread is over a year old, and was pretty controversial at the time, I'll go out on another limb and suggest a few other guys have figured out the mystery fix and have deferred to Tree Monkey as the "go to guy" for this out of a sense of professional courtesy, and hopefully, an acquired sense of professional maturity since the last time this whole thing was hashed out....maybe even because of the last time it was hashed out.
At least I'd like to think so.
I sometimes need a high speed jet added to a 3120 carb......I send it to someone else. That way I can keep porting. The WT-199 is other carb that I send to have done. If someone has taken their hard earned time and learned how to do this.......I'm all about helping them make a few buck from that knowledge.
Forgive me for going way out on a limb here, but I'll take a SWAG that if simply replacing a faulty nozzle was the solution to the problem, Husky would have chosen that approach in their tech bulletin on the matter instead of determining a carb swap to the Zama was the better way to go. May have been PR and/or contractual components at play for such a decision, but most who have transitioned to the Zama are less than enthused about that approach as well..., at least according to what I've read so far on the subject.
Then again......., mebbe a freekin' nozzle replacement on a "bad" HD199 fixes everything. Then again again, would probably depend on the production run of the nozzles, now wouldn't it?
Gotta be more to it, but it can't be much. I'm just surprised there's only one guy on the planet with the magic bullet to fix these things...not all of which are lemons btw, (and that's according to Husky, not just AS posts), though they have been said to fail over time. That indicates material failure, not design failure.
Also kinda funny that the same bulletin didn't include other saws with HD199's, namely 346XP's...unless I totally missed that tech note.
Both my 357XP and 346XP flat out scream with stock HD199's. I'm hard-pressed to find an issue with that.
opcorn: