About ten tanks. In the video, I have the original faceplate back on. That was almost one tank in that video. It is burning a lot of fuel.
I will assume the saw is normal for now. I won’t go to the saw shop. It is so weird that it burns so much fuel. But, I will see if it improves. Thanks for the help.
You got any piston picts?. Thats crazy dirty for red armor oil!View attachment 216731 View attachment 216732 This was after the first day.
91 octane non-ethanol
Red Armor 40:1
Air filter working well.
You got any piston picts?. Thats crazy dirty for red armor oil!
Mine was really thirsty at first too. IIRC the tank isn't very big for an 80cc saw.
View attachment 216731 View attachment 216732 This was after the first day.
91 octane non-ethanol
Red Armor 40:1
Air filter working well.
Just to change stuff up a bit, why not try a few gallons of 10 percent ethanol 91 fuel with red armor at 50 to 1.
Idea here is to return saw to stock comfiguration and typical customer consumables, as thats what the designers at stihl had in mind when programming the tune. I know that FI is supposed to compensate but i have also seen instances were set bounderies in tune software was not able to handle every possible circumstance of variables that might arise
A few local gas stations around me that have non ethanol 91 use a strange additive package that leave major deposits on 2 stroke spark plugs. Were talking same oil, same ratio, used in different equipment, such as trimmers, blowers, drills, pole pruners, chainsaws of different brands. This fuel was used under multiple branding in other stations also. Had customer switch to different non ethanol fuel from another town and source, and they no longer had running issues and plug deposits.
I will not say it wont make a difference but I highly doubt it. I ran three tanks through a 500 a couple weeks ago @32:1 and 40:1 strapped to a mill. Saw never missed a beat. And that was after a decent elevation/temp change since the last it was run months ago.Just to change stuff up a bit, why not try a few gallons of 10 percent ethanol 91 fuel with red armor at 50 to 1.
Idea here is to return saw to stock configuration and typical customer consumables, as thats what the designers at stihl had in mind when programming the tune. I know that FI is supposed to compensate but i have also seen instances were set bounderies in tune software was not able to handle every possible circumstance of variables that might arise
I will not say it wont make a difference but I highly doubt it. I ran three tanks through a 500 a couple weeks ago @32:1 strapped to a mill. Saw never missed a beat. And that was after a decent elevation/temp change since the last it was run months ago.View attachment 216768
Yeah...Usually it's a low Reid Vapour Pressure psi (RVP) in the fuel that will cause that. The fuel volitility should be jacked up in the colder/cooler months to flash on time or it won't run probably. There is something like 28 difference blends that come out of the refineries for the US. ( "Winter fuel" ) It real should be referred to as Summer fuel by season as the Summer fuel is only in affect from June till September there in abouts. Can't remember the actual federal law dates? A few exceptions with the likes of Arizona and California and such. Basically, higher volatility (high RVP)..is a butane base generally) that causes 'smog' in the heat and Low RVP fuel (summer) is very expensive to make in comparison.That whole fuel ordeal was a big issue, actually had husqvarna tech from Charlotte NC and Japanese tech from Kawasaki fugi actually fly over from japan! We had 15 new kawi trimmers that would not idle right, could not get our other products to run right no matter how we adjusted them.
The dealer I worked at was using same fuel as that customer was having issues with. That fuel was sent to a lab by husqvarna for testing and they came back and told me to switch fuels lol. No real answer except it has a strange additive package that is wreaking havoc with running systems of the engine.
That was a fun week at work, the Japanese tech even came with an interpreter!
The one I got for the tree service smoked and ran rich also for a couple gallons of gas then seemed to lean out some. Only thing done to it was a muffler mod, imho it still ran and cut great out of the box just ran rich at first. The guys crew fights over who gets to use it just about every day.How many hours are on it? I’ve heard from a few different sources that it takes some time to get through the break-in period and then supposedly they start running a little better. I can’t confirm that though
I'm no expert here by any means on the 500i and its running symptoms but... if the muffler looked like that after its first tank I imagine after 10 that spark screen 'might' be plugged up with carbon not preventing the saw winding out to max rpm. I'd get a butane torch, some pliers and burn the carbon off your spark screen. I think its easy with these higher tech saws to forget they are still 90% the same as saws were many years ago & we overlook the basic simple things. I'd also check the throttle body plate that its opening right up etc. Good lucky.View attachment 216731 View attachment 216732 This was after the first day.
91 octane non-ethanol
Red Armor 40:1
Air filter working well.
I have no screen in it. Throttle is good to go. Maybe this is just how fuel injection is in these things, IDK.I'm no expert here by any means on the 500i and its running symptoms but... if the muffler looked like that after its first tank I imagine after 10 that spark screen 'might' be plugged up with carbon not preventing the saw winding out to max rpm. I'd get a butane torch, some pliers and burn the carbon off your spark screen. I think its easy with these higher tech saws to forget they are still 90% the same as saws were many years ago & we overlook the basic simple things. I'd also check the throttle body plate that its opening right up etc. Good lucky.
Thanks for the info.Yeah...Usually it's a low Reid Vapour Pressure psi (RVP) in the fuel that will cause that. The fuel volitility should be jacked up in the colder/cooler months to flash on time or it won't run probably. There is something like 28 difference blends that come out of the refineries for the US. ( "Winter fuel" ) It real should be referred to as Summer fuel by season as the Summer fuel is only in affect from June till September there in abouts. Can't remember the actual federal law dates? A few exceptions with the likes of Arizona and California and such. Basically, higher volatility (highRPV..is a butane base generally) that causes 'smog' in the heat and Low (summer) RPV is very expensive to make in comparison.
Plus they shut down refineries for two weeks to switch over. Generally a price drive. It's said you will get 1.7% more energy out off summer fuel. Maybe a good race trick in the winter if you bring your summer fuel saw 'out of the hot' and into the log?
Well that's how that works.
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Anyway, @CLEARCUT
You can do the same if chance you are low on RVP psi in the fuel.
Light a fire and stick it by the fire or warm a fuelled up saw in the truck and fire it up immediately as you go outside. Well it's easier than jacking it up with butane. You can pump it up to almost 50 psi with butane I believe (if needed in really cold weather.) California has a 6.9 fed standard by state law. I think about 9psi is more standards in summer in most of NA.
The formula is tested at 4:1 ratio.
20% fuel to air in a small cylinder with a pressure valve and dunked in 100 f water.
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Ps
Don't you guys find that chain brake way too tight..as they have no glide?