High Quality Chainsaw Bars Husqvarna Toys Hockfire Saws

Great starting saws. Such a perk

67L36Driver

Here For The Long Haul!
Local time
9:57 AM
User ID
596
Joined
Jan 18, 2016
Messages
9,559
Reaction score
40,688
Location
Missouri
Country flag
I don't have any saws that run.

Chain stays sharp to I bet.

My one pull wonder:
b2bd6177f767d50caa67c86c57ac6a9e.jpg

But you gots to be quick opening the choke.
 

TJ the Chainsaw Mechanic

Old Homelites rule!
Local time
7:57 AM
User ID
433
Joined
Jan 7, 2016
Messages
4,629
Reaction score
8,970
Location
Next to my bench at the shop, Oregon
Last edited:

Backtroller

Here For The Long Haul!
Local time
9:57 AM
User ID
349
Joined
Dec 31, 2015
Messages
2,794
Reaction score
11,344
Location
Land of Badgers
Country flag
My 421 Dolmar starts the best. But it's really splitting hairs. My Mofo 036 is a close second. Usually it's me who goofs it up though because the controls are different going from Stihl to Dolmar and vise versa.

My 192t is my most frustrating saw. If you don't hear the first pop and it had popped, you can pull it all day long. I have to start it before someone starts a saw or walk away where's it a little more quiet. Do it right and your rewarded with a great running saw all day long. Do it wrong and you may as well throw it in the truck.
 

Locust Cutter

Air Force Redneck
Local time
9:57 AM
User ID
387
Joined
Jan 3, 2016
Messages
2,288
Reaction score
7,662
Location
KS
Easiest is a Tie between my MMWS 9010 and my muffler modded 562: 1-2 pulls. Mac 10-10 is right in there though at 1-3. Everything else is pretty good except for the Stumpbroke 372 and MMWS 262, when cold, and been sitting for awhile, ***IF*** I don't trickle a snort of mix down the carb first. If I do "prime" them, they light off very quickly and well. Both of the Huskies are pissed off at the world once running, and one pull starters once warmed, but they can be a PITA, w/o priming when cold.
 

LittleLebowski

Super OPE Member
Local time
10:57 AM
User ID
1201
Joined
Apr 27, 2016
Messages
340
Reaction score
837
Location
VA
Dolmar 421 and 6400 start perfectly each time with two pulls following the factory starting procedure. When warm, one pull. Used the 6400 in 18 degree weather Sunday, no issues. Sooner or later, I need the mufflers gutted and the saws retuned.
 

Al Smith

Here For The Long Haul!
Local time
10:57 AM
User ID
537
Joined
Jan 14, 2016
Messages
6,471
Reaction score
14,398
Location
North western Ohio
Country flag
I've got a couple that start real easy .The best is the first saw I ever bought in about'74-75 or so,an S25 Poulan .The 024 Stihl starts easy.A tweeked Stihl 038 Mag takes about 8-10 on the first start but after nearly always lights off on one .
Most of the McCullochs do but one must consider they don't get much run time and sit on the shelf more than they get used .Kind of hard to exercise 40 -50 saws during the course of a year .
 

FederalQ

Super OPE Member
GoldMember
Local time
9:57 AM
User ID
3210
Joined
May 17, 2017
Messages
320
Reaction score
1,070
Location
NE Wisconsin
Country flag
Reviving an old thread. The oldest saw I own is a Dolmar ps6000i and it is hands down the easiest starting saw. There has been cold weather lately and on a -10 (-23 for the rest of the world) day I could not get either the 550 or ms460 to fire. I grabbed that Dolmar with the Tillotson injector choke and it started on the third pull. All with the same fuel and not stored anywhere heated. I can only guess they went away from that carburetor due to emission regulations.
 

president

Super OPE Member
Local time
7:57 AM
User ID
14155
Joined
Oct 12, 2020
Messages
269
Reaction score
423
Location
peachland BC Canada
Country flag
Ol' friend of mine came over with a saw he had just picked up, said it took too many pulls to start. So I said let me see that thing once. Pulled it over real slowly a few times, plup-plup-plup. Let it sit a couple seconds, choked it gave 'er a good pull and she fired right up. He thought that was a pretty good trick.
I'm getting older now so if I can add some trickery into the mix to make things easier I do. Why pull hard on a saw to prime the carburetor, when slow and easy works just as well? SS
plup, plup,plup lol
 

qurotro

Cookie Cutter
Local time
9:57 AM
User ID
6198
Joined
May 19, 2018
Messages
1,390
Reaction score
5,535
Location
Ar
Country flag
Tillotson carb saws are easier to start than the others in my opinion.. The old husky that equipped them start in less than 5 pulls from long term storage.
 

FederalQ

Super OPE Member
GoldMember
Local time
9:57 AM
User ID
3210
Joined
May 17, 2017
Messages
320
Reaction score
1,070
Location
NE Wisconsin
Country flag
I watched an old USA Stihl documentary from the 80’s and overwhelmingly the dealers interviewed chose to sell Stihl saws because they reliably started. Their number 1 customer complaint of the brands they were selling at the time was “failure to start.”
 

EFSM

Super OPE Member
Local time
9:57 AM
User ID
29079
Joined
Apr 30, 2024
Messages
440
Reaction score
1,037
Location
Extreme southern IL
Country flag
I watched an old USA Stihl documentary from the 80’s and overwhelmingly the dealers interviewed chose to sell Stihl saws because they reliably started. Their number 1 customer complaint of the brands they were selling at the time was “failure to start.”
Interesting. They must have lost the vision at some point--the MS250 is one of the hardest cranking/starting stock saws for its size, at least according to customer complaints.
 
Top