Winterizing

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Backstage

Backstage

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Trying to find my tape measure
Surprised not to see a thread like this in the search.

I know this is a non-issue for guys who run saws for a living through the winter, but for those of us who mostly use them after the ticks die and before everything freezes to the ground…

I’ve made enough equipment changes this year that I’m revisiting the subject. I’ve always run them empty and set on the shelf, but are they really empty? Isn’t a fuel film left in the carb more likely to varnish than leaving it completely full with stabilized E0? Then you see comments like “I make sure I do not run any autotune or mtronic saws out of fuel” where people experience those carbs getting confused by running dry. Then there’s the guys who say the ONLY way to do it is to run them every 30 days.

What 2 cycle gear are you shelving this year, and how?
 
Pioneer

Pioneer

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Drain your gas out, pour in some Aspen 50-1, run for a few minutes and put into storage. Come spring, pour in your usual gas mix and go.
I have a friend who switched to Aspen 3 years ago, and he has had zero problems since then.
Expensive to run all the time if you use your saw a lot, but perfect for storage.
 
Canyon Angler

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All my saws have carburetors. I only run non ethanol fuel and when storing I run them dry and nothing else.
I have had some saws sit on the shelf for 2 or 3 years and start right back up with no problem.
^^^This^^^

If I'm feeling especially paranoid, I might put some Seafoam into the last tankful of fuel, then after dumping out the last of it from the tank, choke the crap out of it -- even if it only runs for a couple of seconds -- until it won't even pop anymore...
 
Huskybill

Huskybill

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I was cutting all winter from sept. Till mud season in the spring. My saws were in storage all summer. I cleaned them, squared the bars, sharpened the chains, cleaned the airfilter, changed the sparkplug, topped off the fuel and bar oil. Then they sit.
 
dboyd351

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All my saws have carburetors. I only run non ethanol fuel and when storing I run them dry and nothing else.
I have had some saws sit on the shelf for 2 or 3 years and start right back up with no problem.
^^^+2.^^^^
This is exactly what I do. Never had an issue.
 
GoBigRed

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For long term storage:

warm the saw for a bit before pouring out the gas. Then drain it. Start the saw and run it until it dies. I saw video where the guy shook the saw when it starts to stumble a little. I do this now and it appears to get more gas through it. Then choke it and start it again. Shake it when it starts to die. Then keep pulling it until it stops popping.
Zero fuel in the carb

yes, if they sit idle for a few months with conditioner in it you will be fine. But over time, even ethanol free breaks down. Ethanol absorbs moisture which is the big enemy. Straight gas will evaporate and varnish. Warm weather speeds the process. So whatever you do, just don’t keep gas it for more than a few months as most have said.
 
LuDookie

LuDookie

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I run E-free fuel and just drain and run dry when I don’t know when I’ll cut again. Stored saws as long as 2 years and they crack and run like I put them away yesterday.
 
hotajax

hotajax

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Ice storms are prevalent, so I keep the saws handy. I just keep premix in them, and fire them up every month or so. Never an issue because the premix fuels generally all have stabilizer free inside the package. Plus the premix lasts forever and a day
 
firekindler

firekindler

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For long term storage:

warm the saw for a bit before pouring out the gas. Then drain it. Start the saw and run it until it dies. I saw video where the guy shook the saw when it starts to stumble a little. I do this now and it appears to get more gas through it. Then choke it and start it again. Shake it when it starts to die. Then keep pulling it until it stops popping.
Zero fuel in the carb

yes, if they sit idle for a few months with conditioner in it you will be fine. But over time, even ethanol free breaks down. Ethanol absorbs moisture which is the big enemy. Straight gas will evaporate and varnish. Warm weather speeds the process. So whatever you do, just don’t keep gas it for more than a few months as most have said.
I do something similar but without the shaking. Once it runs out, I'll alternate the choke open and closed until it won't pop. Then I'll pull the plug and pour a few drops of straight mix oil in the cylinder. Pull the cord a few times to coat the piston and cylinder for corrosion protection. Leave the cylinder at top dead center, replace the plug, no worries. I live on the North Coast of California, and winters are really humid here. I've had a few saws lay that way for four or five years, and pop on the third or fourth pull. The mechanics at the saw shop sometimes remark on the lack of wear on my older saws. All of them have carbs.
 

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