I just bought my first gas chainsaw does anybody know the gas/oil ratio I need to use?
A standard 2 cycle engine should have a 50:1 mix ratio.
Look at your owners manual.
If you bought it used, then buy a six pack of 2 stroke oil and mix one can with a gallon of gas.
Use gasoline a notch above the cheapest.
It would be best to check the owner's manual. I had an older chainsaw that required a 16:1 mixture. Most of my recent purchases (chainsaws and brushcutters) require a 50:1 mixture, but one (an inexpensive leaf-blower) requires a 40:1 ratio. You can find "universal" two-stroke oil.
Steve
Check for the ratio. Use high octane gasoline. And use oil specified for chainsaw use. It will be formulated for the hot conditions.:thumbsup:
I just bought my first gas chainsaw does anybody know the gas/oil ratio I need to use?
Bingo, when I started running saws in the late 70s', it was 32:1. I still have one of those old saws and now run it 40:1, like I do all mine, old and new. I run mostly Stihl Ultra full synthetic. And non ethanol 91 octane.It is the concentration of the OIL that determines a mix ratio, NOT the piece of equipment. Look at what the OIL is rated for. In the past common oil ratios available were 16:1, 25:1 and 40:1. Today 50:1 is the most common. You can run ANY piece of 2 cycle equipment safely at a 50:1 ratio regardless of what the manufacturer stated in the original literature as long as the OIL is rated at 50:1.
I use non ethanol 89 octane fuel mixed at 50:1 with a 50:1 oil for ALL my 2 cycle equipment including my fathers old craftsman chainsaw from the 70's. So check what the OIL is rated for and mix accordingly. The main killer of 2 cycle equipment is a mis-adjusted and/or dirty carburetor. Learn how to properly tune your 2 cycle equipment, use good gas mixed according to the OIL spec and you will never burn up an engine.
However, oil affects the richness indirectly but in an opposite sense.
If your mix has more oil and less gas (eg 25:1) then if the same amount of mix enters the chamber as a 50:1 mix, then the 25:1 mix produces a leaner gas air ratio.
Some of the oil components do not burn but scavenge soot and smoke (ie unburnt oil and gas) this robs the mix of gas and effectively leans the gas-air ratio.
The difference is small but it may be enough to cook a saw if someone switches from a saw tuned for 50:1 to 25:1 without retuning.
It is the concentration of the OIL that determines a mix ratio, NOT the piece of equipment. Look at what the OIL is rated for.