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- Apr 5, 2024
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I have been dealing with several similar issues on a few different saws lately. The issue is definitely related to the carburetor on each of these saws. It is provoked by setting a saw down for 15-30 seconds at idle, and then picking it up, which causes the saw to die. The first thought that came to my mind was that it was fuel puddling somewhere in the intake tract due to a lip protruding, and is released into the crankcase when the saw is picked up, causing the saw to die or lose rpms from running rich. This is a common issue on the 026 and 044. However, in my case I found that every one of these issues for me is actually related to the carburetor. How do I know that? Because they go away when a good carb is put on the saw.
I have played with tuning for hours, pop-off pressure, metering lever height, cleaning carbs, kitting carbs, swapping jets, swapping nozzles, and just about everything else in my quest to make the bad carbs run better. I have experienced some success, but not total success, with a couple of them. One of the partial successes involved swapping the nozzle/check valve assy. Another involved raising pop-off by putting a VERY stiff spring under the metering arm.
My question to everyone is: what in the world would cause a carb to load a saw up at idle? Some of these saws are on the ragged edge of lean (almost won’t idle because they’re tuned so lean at idle), but then they still load the intake up. The effect is most pronounced when the saw is tilted downwards quickly.
My theory is that it has something to do with atomization of fuel. Maybe the carb is just simply bad because the jets are worn out and not atomizing. Does this sound reasonable? I’d love to hear your thoughts.
I have played with tuning for hours, pop-off pressure, metering lever height, cleaning carbs, kitting carbs, swapping jets, swapping nozzles, and just about everything else in my quest to make the bad carbs run better. I have experienced some success, but not total success, with a couple of them. One of the partial successes involved swapping the nozzle/check valve assy. Another involved raising pop-off by putting a VERY stiff spring under the metering arm.
My question to everyone is: what in the world would cause a carb to load a saw up at idle? Some of these saws are on the ragged edge of lean (almost won’t idle because they’re tuned so lean at idle), but then they still load the intake up. The effect is most pronounced when the saw is tilted downwards quickly.
My theory is that it has something to do with atomization of fuel. Maybe the carb is just simply bad because the jets are worn out and not atomizing. Does this sound reasonable? I’d love to hear your thoughts.





