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  1. gregbesia Burning Hunk

    joined: Jan 26, 2009
    136 posts
    central CT
    In september of last year I bought a new husky 346xp . It has served me well, and since then I used it to cut about 5 cords of wood. The question is - Should I have the saw tuned up at this point ? I am doing my regular maintenance on the saw: cleaning chips, dust, bar, air filter. What else should I be doing? I read somewhere on this forum that after using a new saw for a while it should be re tuned. Is this correct ? Thanks to all who care to steer me in the right direction.
    #1

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  2. Bigg_Redd Minister of Fire

    joined: Oct 19, 2008
    2,966 posts
    Shelton, WA
    If it's starting easy, idling, and revving hard you don't need to do anything
    Scotty Overkill likes this.
  3. MasterMech Minister of Fire

    joined: Aug 2, 2011
    4,976 posts
    Hudson Valley NY
    The retune is just a simple carb adjustment to compensate for the new parts breaking in.

    A good saw tuneup includes a thorough cleaning, clean/replace the air filter, clean the spark arrestor screen, replace the spark plug and maybe the fuel pickup/filter. Check it over for cracked fuel/impulse lines. I check over the clutch/drive sprocket and address any concerns there as necessary. Then the carb adjustment and finish it off by sharpening the chain and dressing the bar if necessary.

    I usually also replace or repair small items like bent throttle linkages and missing screws or chain catchers with no extra labor charges as I go through a saw tune-up. Saws with a lot of time on them may get new AV buffers (if mounted on rubber instead of springs) depending on how the saw feels.

    Sounds to me like you keep up the maintenance and cleaning for your 346XP so at this point a quick carburetor adjustment would be the only thing you need. You could learn to DIY or maybe a pro would do it quick for you. Sometimes they don't even charge you for such a simple in and out adjustment.
  4. gregbesia Burning Hunk

    joined: Jan 26, 2009
    136 posts
    central CT
    Thank you guys for a quick and informative response. This forum and members are the best!!!!
    PA Fire Bug likes this.
  5. Scotty Overkill firewood hoarder

    joined: Sep 24, 2011
    7,169 posts
    central PA
    You should clean the air filter out at least every time or two that you use it. Also, like MM said, its easy to tune the Carb. But just as Bigg Redd said, if its running good, just run it. You'll know when it needs a tune-up, trust me.
  6. Jags Super Moderator

    joined: Aug 2, 2006
    11,515 posts
    Northern Illinois
    If you purchased from a reputable dealer, most of those will retune a carb for free. It only takes a few seconds.
  7. smokinj Minister of Fire

    joined: Aug 11, 2008
    15,548 posts
    Anderson, Indiana
    Thistle, Nixon, wkpoor and 1 other person like this.
  8. gregbesia Burning Hunk

    joined: Jan 26, 2009
    136 posts
    central CT
    Update: A few day ago ( memorial day to be exact) I found some nice locust by my work place.When I started to cut it up, the saw just did not feel right.It started okay, but it lacked power.It kept bogging in the cut.
    The next day I cleaned and washed the air filter with soap (I dont own an air compressor). I also cleaned a spark arrestor and added 2 table spoons of sea foam to the gas tank. Maybe some of those steps were not needed. I hope that none were harmful, but all I can say is WOW! The saw feels brand new again, and combined with stihl RSC chain just eats the wood now. Note to self: do a better job cleaning the air filter, buy air compressor.
    Scotty Overkill and smokinj like this.
  9. DanCorcoran Minister of Fire

    joined: Jan 5, 2010
    1,789 posts
    Richmond, VA
    Harbor Freight has some inexpensive compressors....my 8-gallon / 2.5 HP cost me $100 seven years ago and works great. Use it mostly for tire pressure and cleaning the chainsaw.
    mecreature likes this.
  10. mecreature Minister of Fire

    joined: Dec 16, 2010
    755 posts
    indiana
    I have a cheapo Delta I got a lowes years ago. 12 gallon. It has worked fine for what I need.
    You'll wonder why you never had one.
  11. amateur cutter Minister of Fire

    joined: Aug 20, 2010
    1,118 posts
    West Michigan
    If you clean the filter with compressed air, don't blow directly thru it. The high pressure pinpoint air stream will actually punch microscopic holes in the filter media, & allow tiny particles into the engine. Blow across the filter, or wash just like you're doing. That wood dust is really abrasive, & hard on the engine. A C
    n6crv, Thistle and jeff_t like this.
  12. gregbesia Burning Hunk

    joined: Jan 26, 2009
    136 posts
    central CT
    Thanks guys,all good info. AC- thanks for the advice on compressed air.
  13. MasterMech Minister of Fire

    joined: Aug 2, 2011
    4,976 posts
    Hudson Valley NY
    I'll usually dial down my regulator if I'm using the compressor to clean a filter, even using AC's techniques. Just adds that margin of safety. Seen too many engines die from dirt ingestion that occured because of a poor fitting or damaged filter.
  14. Thistle Minister of Fire

    joined: Dec 16, 2010
    3,939 posts
    Central IA
    Every cutting session my saws get a quick cleaning from the air compressor before they're put away.That's whether its 30 minutes or 6-7 hrs of use.
  15. Backwoods Savage Minister of Fire

    joined: Feb 14, 2007
    24,520 posts
    Michigan
    And never forget the old saw: If it is working well, don't try to fix it.
    Thistle likes this.

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