Brewz
Free Range Human in a Tax Farm
- Local time
- 4:28 PM
- User ID
- 550
- Joined
- Jan 16, 2016
- Messages
- 4,217
- Reaction score
- 14,322
- Location
- Hunter Valley - Australia

Possible issues -
1. the 661 likes to warm up a little before you cut.
2. shutting the saw off immediately after a good long cut and then trying to restart it.
3. running the old 4700 coils. They allow the saw to go too lean.
4. running the old intake boot.
5. opening up the muffler too much on a stock saw.
6. running a 7pin sprocket on anything under 32" bar. Stock 661 has the torque to pull 8pin right out of the box. A 7pin 661 = slow. None of my stock or muff modded 660s could ever pull an 8pin faster then 7pin even on a short 20" bar.
7. always "resetting" the saw. Saw learns/tunes pretty fast. A "reset" should be tried when it's really not working right.
It seems to me that in my conversations and from the comments made in this thread, most of the hate comes from guys using 661's in logging/tree service commercial applications.
I am sure there are plenty out there that love them also but it seems that the drama that the 661 can exhibit is not everyone's cup of tea.
Part of the power argument is hard for you guys in the states to compare to what we have to deal with timber wise here in Oz.
Point 6, if I put anything over a 7 pin sprocket on a saw here, it doesn't always cut faster. I just get more dust and the saw chatters so bad it breaks things. The timber is to hard for the increased chain speed and it just bounces and skips through, unable to shave the timber out.
I think the saw I am going to be handed is a dud saw with issues but considering that people in the know consider a 70cc their limbing saw in Australia has to say something. This guy uses 660's as his climbing saws when dealing with big Aussie eucalyptus
I am going to an aussie GTG in May and they will have pine which I have never cut. I cant wait to see hat its like.
Oh come one mate, that may as well be foam wrapped in cardboard, with a core made from icecream