- Location
- Retired in Minneapolis
There's a thread on AS that I responded to that should go on here too.
Someone asked about running a saw out of fuel. My SOP is to keep a mental note of how long I've been cutting. At an good time I'll stop and service the saw before it needs refueling. There is a very distinctive gurgle or stall that tells me that the saw is sucking an air bubble. Anyone who has run saws knows that sound. It is the yellow light warning you to stop now. On very rare occasions I might jiggle the saw to make sure that the fuel pickup is at the bottom of the tank and not hanging up on a knob inside the tank. The only time I would do this is to finish a critical cut. Otherwise the saw is stopped and serviced.
Here is a case study:
A number of years ago I talked with a friend who worked for a log home building company. The crew was burning up a lot of saws so they called the regional Stihl distributor. The tech came out to the place where they built the log houses.
After watching them work for a while he figured out the problem. The workers would be cutting and the saw would gurgle when it was low on gas. Instead of stopping to refuel they would jiggle the last drops of fuel towards the pickup and get the last cut done. When the saw sucked up the last drops it would go lean because it was pulling vapors or only drops of gas. After running the saws many times in this leaned out mode the saw would overheat and destroy itself.
After learning this the work procedures were changed. At the first burble of low fuel the saw was stopped and serviced. After the change they stopped burning up saws.
Someone asked about running a saw out of fuel. My SOP is to keep a mental note of how long I've been cutting. At an good time I'll stop and service the saw before it needs refueling. There is a very distinctive gurgle or stall that tells me that the saw is sucking an air bubble. Anyone who has run saws knows that sound. It is the yellow light warning you to stop now. On very rare occasions I might jiggle the saw to make sure that the fuel pickup is at the bottom of the tank and not hanging up on a knob inside the tank. The only time I would do this is to finish a critical cut. Otherwise the saw is stopped and serviced.
Here is a case study:
A number of years ago I talked with a friend who worked for a log home building company. The crew was burning up a lot of saws so they called the regional Stihl distributor. The tech came out to the place where they built the log houses.
After watching them work for a while he figured out the problem. The workers would be cutting and the saw would gurgle when it was low on gas. Instead of stopping to refuel they would jiggle the last drops of fuel towards the pickup and get the last cut done. When the saw sucked up the last drops it would go lean because it was pulling vapors or only drops of gas. After running the saws many times in this leaned out mode the saw would overheat and destroy itself.
After learning this the work procedures were changed. At the first burble of low fuel the saw was stopped and serviced. After the change they stopped burning up saws.