I helped my health impacted neighbor process his firewood yesterday.
He had an impressive workforce of logger buddies of his and his employee, 3-5 saws and 2 fairly big hydraulic tractor driven vertical splitters.
I drove over with my car, took the following saws with me, all of which I fired up at home without issues before placing them in my cars trunk.
Makita XA5000, Dolmar MMWS6100, Dolmar PS-7310, Dolmar PS-7900 & 36" B&C, Dolmar PS-9010
My PS-7900 took a ride on the back seat due to the 36" B&C, the others were in the cars trunk.
The first saws to come out were my PS-7900 & MMWS6100, they fired up fine.
The PS-7900 was on noodling duty, I ran her out of fuel and by the time I walked to my car and refueld her she was vapor locked.
I opened my cars trunk, got hit by an insane amount of heat coming out of it, and grabbed my PS-7310.
I tried starting her up but she didn't make a single sound of coming to life - and she didn't for the remainder of the day.
I barely restarted my PS-7900 pouring fuel directly into the cylinder, twice.
She vapor locked a second time too even though I kept her run idle between noodling cuts.
Summary:
- PS-7900 , vapor locked twice, got run hard and long
- PS-7310 , vapor locked just from sitting in the hot car trunk, no go all day
- XS5000 , MMWS6100 , PS-9010 , started fine when needed , all three did some bucking , the XS5000 had some noodling action too
Identical transporting and storing conditions for all saws, same fuel mix, hot and humid day as it rained the previous day.
My Dolmar PS-7900 wearing 36" B&C setup noodling 40" beech and oak rounds was the star of the show.
The loggers said "they have never seen anything like it"!

They run 661's and 462's with 18" bars at work, and yeah they are hamfisted with their equipment.