Why shouldn't I "air start" my chainsaw???

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Oh and just to be clear, I want to actually shame this person:

Here's its post

Since I can't actually do it directly on reddit, having been banned for questioning the sacred altar of transgenderism (despite several degrees qualifying my speaking on the matter). I wanted to call him a retard directly, of course, but that word has long been banned (the "r" word is the new "n" word. I wonder when we'll get through the whole alphabet). In so doing reddit has solidified itself a safe space for retards.
If that was you in video. I dont see a thing wrong with it. ✌️👍

Do what feels right to you. :cheers:
 
Well, I guess Daddy was trying to kill me all along.
He had me drop starting an XL-12 with a bow bar at 12.
No chain guards.
No chain brake.
No PPE.
And shockingly no injuries.

I'm all for personal safety.
But some people are so scared of their own shadows they have no place around a saw.
 
I drop started for years. Then it became virtually illegal in the workplace. So i learned to start with the saw between my thighs. Now I feel totally uncomfortable drop starting. It never felt dangerous before. Now it does only because I have become unaccustomed to it.

I start my ms660 clone on the ground. Once it's warm, I can start it any way I want. Cold, for me, it's best on the ground.
 
We were freehand ripping some bridge beams far back remote area and I was drop starting my Stihl 090AV, as well as my 066`s, the other fellows with me were amazed I started those size saws using the drop start method but not one of them thought it was dangerous. They were all long time chainsaw users,many had worked as woods workers.The biggest saws under mine were in the 65cc size bracket and they all drop start saws.
 
When we say drop starting where is it that one is holding the saw. I can see if you are gripping the rear part of the handle ( where the trigger is ) using only one hand that could be dangerous. I hold the top of the handle and let the throttle do the fast idle thing. It doesn't seem dangerous to me that way.
 
My mind is blown. People actually start on the ground? Between their thighs? What am I reading? I hold the saw with my left hand by the top handle with the bar pointed away from my body to the left and I pull with the right hand. I thought the ground start thing was just something they put in the manual for feeble old men who can't support the weight of the saw.
 
Safety standards that claim you MUST start a saw on the ground are made by committee "experts" that have never actually used a saw in the bush.
Saws with long bars are nose heavy, pick them up and the tip of the bar stays on the ground. With this setup, many guys like to rest the tip on a stump or log and hold the saw with the right hand in the rear handle and pull with the left hand. If your saw doesn't have a chain brake, this allows you to hold the throttle open and release it as soon as the engine starts and before the chain goes crazy. I like this method as it gives you complete control of the throttle but when trying it on a saw with a short bar, I can't find the strength to hold the saw up (bar off the ground) with my right hand in the rear handle. Old and feeble.
Crotch starting seems to work with saws that pull over and start easy but with saws that are hard to pull and like to jerk the handle out of your hand, I need to pull against the inertia of the saw being dropped. Too many thigh bruises and maybe a weak left arm.
Drop starting seems to work for all saws except for a few small ones like the Hommie Super-2 that don't have a method of latching the throttle open for cold starts.
 
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