Carb Tuning

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rm17742

rm17742

ArboristSite Lurker
Joined
Mar 19, 2008
Messages
19
Location
Lexington, SC
Hello all... I am a long time lurker, first time poster and I plan on posting more! Yall have cost me a lot of money over the last few years, but I have some great saws to show for it.

Here is my deal: I just picked up a new Makita 401 on ebay as a backup to my 346xp. I decided to do my 1st muffler mod which turned out really well. I have a Baileys tach and set the saw to 12,000 RPM as recommended by the manufacturer. The problem is that the saw still sounds really rich to me. It constantly 4 strokes at WOT.

My Question is - do you tune by RPM alone since I have a tach, or should I exceed the recommended RPM and lean it out until it just begins to 4 stroke? Am I doing something wrong by having it run rich which still running at 12,000 RPM? I just adjusted my high screw until I hit that mark and quit. I am just concerned because I would probably run it leaner if I didn't have a tach and know what the speed is (it would "feel better").

Thanks!

===Russell

346XP
359
334T
DCS-6401 (with a bow bar!)
DCS-401
029 (my first saw @ 15)
 
ray benson
Joined
Sep 11, 2002
Messages
31,994
Location
Indiana
ShoerFast

ShoerFast

Tree Freak
Joined
Nov 14, 2005
Messages
25,843
Location
Morrison Colorado, at the base of the Rockies
Thanks for the advice... I may lean it out a little bit, but I don't want to get carried away. Thanks!

By far the best tuning aid is a stopwatch and a good straight clean log.

From right were your saw is, or fatter, cut a timed cookie, lean it maybe 5 minutes worth.

Cut again repeat.

What you will see is a cut @ (for a say)

@ 1 1/4 fat a 10 second cut

@ 1 1/8 fat a 12 second cut

@ 1 turn out a 9 second cut (Most saws fall real flat on there face when you hit that 'too lean' stage.)

back out a little...

@ 1 1/16 out a 13 second cut, bingo, your there.

Most saws 'perfect' have a little burble out of the wood, but go to town in the wood.
 
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