Bar oilers: Too much? Too little? Just right?

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Nonprophet

Nonprophet

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Jul 31, 2009
Messages
102
Location
Orygun
My main two saws right now are my Husky 55 and my Stihl 440 Magnum. When using the 440, if I hold the chain near the face of a cut log and rev it, it sprays oil pretty well onto the log, but when using the Husky I see no oil spray. They both empty the bar oil tank at roughly the same time the fuel tank empties, and, the Husky b&c don't show any signs of overheating and/or unnecessary wear, so.......should I worry or just keep running them the way they are?
 
Last edited:
echoshawn

echoshawn

....Beer is good.....
Joined
Jan 14, 2013
Messages
913
Location
Woods of North Idaho
All of my saws will leave marks like that as well. Keep an eye on the oiling on the Husky. I know of a few that have stripped the plastic oil drive gear. It's a pretty simple fix, but can toast a chain and bar in a hurry.
 
CATDIESEL

CATDIESEL

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
May 31, 2012
Messages
223
Location
IN THE WOODS
my one and only major complaint of my stihl saws. 026's oil pretty good, ms260/261 are just ok. i wish they would put out more oil is all. i feel a saw should near empty the oil tank when it is out of fuel. i know stihl does it for environmental reasons, but i hate it! seems if we try anything but stihl oil the problem is worse.
 
Saw Dr.

Saw Dr.

Junk Collector
Joined
Oct 20, 2007
Messages
5,986
Location
Temple, GA
The 55 has a crank driven oiler. One on my only complaints about that series. Start it up and let it idle for a minute or two. Then take the tip of the bar and put it near something and rev the saw up. It will FLING oil off if it is pumping. The oil pump runs on that saw any time it is started. If you let it sit and idle, it will pump out a pool of oil in a fairly short time.
 

Latest posts

Top