Spent about five hours cutting up large trunks today. Never missed a beat, three tanks of fuel. Seems to work well.
I’d say it’s broke in sir! Best of luck and congrats on a new tool!
Spent about five hours cutting up large trunks today. Never missed a beat, three tanks of fuel. Seems to work well.
If you run out of something to cut come see me i can keep you busy for a while.Spent about five hours cutting up large trunks today. Never missed a beat, three tanks of fuel. Seems to work well.
I don't know if it means anything, but my Echo goes through about 2 tanks of oil to 1 tank of fuel.I've got an 18" Ego that works out great when I'm doing a lot of cut-stop-drag-cut-stop-drag. I went all in on their stuff and have a total of 4 batteries so at least one is fully charged while the other 3 are charging and they charge pretty quick. And customer service is great. Only complaint is with the bigger amp hour batteries it gets heavy. Also have an 18" Stihl that's my go to when doing non-stop cutting, only problem with it is me. I can dull a chain in NTF, but as someone mentioned above I think it might have something to do with the oiler. It doesn't use much B&C oil at all, not like other chainsaws I've had that slung it everywhere. Had a guy that used to fell trees for a living tell me that one tank of fuel = one tank of B&C oil, anybody else ever heard this? Mine will go through a tank of fuel and use very little B&C oil, like unscrew the cap and if you tried to put more in it you'd get more on it.
I have mine regulated to one tank of oil to one tank of fuel. When the fuel runs out, it's time to fill both.I don't know if it means anything, but my Echo goes through about 2 tanks of oil to 1 tank of fuel.
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