KostasVolos
ArboristSite Operative
Both ratios were tried within minutes of each other. I was running 40:1 Trufuel, somehow a can of 50:1 got snuck in. I dumped it in the saw, had to tune richer for the 50:1, and leaner again for the 40:1.
The oil burns. If it's not dripping out the muffler, then it's burning, and contributing to the fuel load.
Oil may not be getting to the combustion chamber as a vapor, but it is getting atomized, which will burn just fine. That's how diesel fuel injectors work, and the earliest ones even used compressed air. What kind of velocity is the oil pushed through the transfer ports at? Like driving a drop of oil through a straw with an air compressor.
If I'm not being mistaken :
1) Synthetic oils do not burn.
Yet engines seem to produce a bit
more power when the mix oil used is of the synthetic kind.
2) A Diesel engine has far different
arrangement and geometry than
a gasoline engine,exactly because the former is able to use any kind of oil as fuel ( never mind the possibly clogged filters ,pumps and injectors /becks ) .
3) Oil when combusted produces a low velocity gas expansion ,with
relatively "heavy" (high density) smoke as byproduct.Heavy smoke means more inertia.
( Why diesel engines do work with
lower revs per minute in comparison with a same cc /c inch gasoline engine ? Because of
lower "piston linear speed" ... )
The gas volume produced from oil is more than the one of the combustion of gasoline ,but it's velocity is low.
Different combination of bore vs stroke has to be used to work with
these conditions ( like in a Diesel engine ) .
Diesel engines run more efficiently than gasoline ones due to large volume of gas produced per mass unit of fuel.
Heat generated dissipates more
efficiently due to larger stroke.
But gasoline engines are more powerful because of the high velocity of gas produced inside the cylinder.Thus the larger bore and the shorter stroke (more revs per minute ) .
In a diesel powered chainsaw (!) ,the combustion of oil may contribute to the operation of the former.
Not so much in a gasoline powered chainsaw.
But rather on the contrary .