SteveSr
Addicted to ArboristSite
Hello,
I have both an MS170 and MS180 in the shop. Both have recently been completely rebuilt so there are NO fuel or air leaks. Pistons look pristine. Both needed new carbs for different reasons.
So I got the latest OEM Stihl/Zama C1Q-S57G carbs. Before I installed them I opened the metering cover and raised the metering lever to the Zama gauge correct height. Both units were about .030" low (lean).
So I put the MS180 back together first. I cut a couple of cookies to get the saw warmed up. I then put the tach on it at WOT and found the max speed at 14.1-14.2K. This seems to be pretty high but at least it is not 15K! I also noticed that the idle adjustment would lower the idle but not really raise it. Is this a characteristic of this particular saw/carb combo? I also noticed that the spec for the 018 is 400 RPM lower at 2800 than its 170 cousin.
Next came the MS170. Did the same procedure and it ran at 15.0K at WOT after being warmed up. The idle screw also seemed to have more effect I could up the idle speed such that the chain would start bumping forward.
So what should I do about these high max speeds? It would appear that the metering lever is not very sensitive in setting WOT max RPM. It appears that it would take a lot of height change to lower the max RPM very much and then it might over richen the low end.
I also did some cruising through some old IPLs and apparently the fixed jet in the HS circuit has gotten smaller over the years. The current "G" version carb comes with 0.44mm fixed jet. As late as 2012 it came with a 0.45mm and earlier but different carb model I found 0.46mm. Does anyone have access to the post 2012 Stihl tech notes that explains the reasons for revisions "B" -> "G"?
OPTIONS:
1. Trust Stihl knows what they are doing and leave everything as-is.
2. Raise the metering lever some more. How much?
3. Start swapping in larger fixed HS jets?
Your thoughts?
I have both an MS170 and MS180 in the shop. Both have recently been completely rebuilt so there are NO fuel or air leaks. Pistons look pristine. Both needed new carbs for different reasons.
So I got the latest OEM Stihl/Zama C1Q-S57G carbs. Before I installed them I opened the metering cover and raised the metering lever to the Zama gauge correct height. Both units were about .030" low (lean).
So I put the MS180 back together first. I cut a couple of cookies to get the saw warmed up. I then put the tach on it at WOT and found the max speed at 14.1-14.2K. This seems to be pretty high but at least it is not 15K! I also noticed that the idle adjustment would lower the idle but not really raise it. Is this a characteristic of this particular saw/carb combo? I also noticed that the spec for the 018 is 400 RPM lower at 2800 than its 170 cousin.
Next came the MS170. Did the same procedure and it ran at 15.0K at WOT after being warmed up. The idle screw also seemed to have more effect I could up the idle speed such that the chain would start bumping forward.
So what should I do about these high max speeds? It would appear that the metering lever is not very sensitive in setting WOT max RPM. It appears that it would take a lot of height change to lower the max RPM very much and then it might over richen the low end.
I also did some cruising through some old IPLs and apparently the fixed jet in the HS circuit has gotten smaller over the years. The current "G" version carb comes with 0.44mm fixed jet. As late as 2012 it came with a 0.45mm and earlier but different carb model I found 0.46mm. Does anyone have access to the post 2012 Stihl tech notes that explains the reasons for revisions "B" -> "G"?
OPTIONS:
1. Trust Stihl knows what they are doing and leave everything as-is.
2. Raise the metering lever some more. How much?
3. Start swapping in larger fixed HS jets?
Your thoughts?