Recently got this saw(my first) and I had it running but it would not
idle. I adjusted the low speed screw but was a little heavy handed,
turnrf it too much and flooded the engine. I let it sit for the night
now I can't get it started at all. I get the pull cord out a foot and
it snaps back HARD. The compression has gone way up and I am at a
loss. Any help would be appreciated.
Cheers,
Etienne
[email protected] wrote:
> Recently got this saw(my first) and I had it running but it would not
> idle. I adjusted the low speed screw but was a little heavy handed,
> turnrf it too much and flooded the engine. I let it sit for the night
> now I can't get it started at all. I get the pull cord out a foot and
> it snaps back HARD. The compression has gone way up and I am at a
> loss. Any help would be appreciated.
> Cheers,
> Etienne
This is just a guess, but maybe worth a try. Sounds like you may have
a little bit of liquid gasoline in the cylinder. The
incompressibility of even a couple of drops of liquid would raise the
compression ratio quite a bit and leave the air-fuel ratio way too rich
to burn. Remove the spark plug and pull the cord several times to
purge the cylinder. If you have compressed air handy, blow a few shots
of air in the cylinder to dry things out. Then replace the spark plug
and try to start it.
DonkeyHody
"Even an old blind hog finds an acorn every now and then."