I have a MS270 that starts and runs great until, it seems, it starts to get hot. After about 10mins of sawing it will stall out unless you grab the throttle quick. If it dies, it won't start until after a few minutes again, but then it will die again.
I rebuilt the carb, new fuel filter, fuel hose, spark plug. These were all the cheap fixes, but it still has the same problem. I'm thinking coil. Any thoughts?
Check compression. My stihl ms310 did exactly that until I realized it had 97psi of compression.....
When the compression was down, was that only when it wasn't running? Or did you check when it was running fine?
Mine runs like a boss when it's running - no hints of low compression when it's running.
It was low overall, but once hot after a couple minutes of cutting and you checked it once it stopped running, that's when I got the 97psi. If you check it cold and you have anywhere from 120-150, it's probably fine, but if you can get it running long enough it's more accurate to check hot.
Hi! Check spark on the cold saw and then on the hot one when dies and compare.
This usually happens when there is a fuel supply issue. Too much or too little
Try with a fresh pickup body after cleaning out the strainer in the carb. That should take care of the too little.
Check whether the metering level in the carb is too high.
It could also happen if you have accumulated saw dust on top of the metering diaphragm.
A wrongly adjusted L and Idle (LA) screws could also cause it. Idle screw turned in too much and L screw used to reduce the fast idle.
Move L screw to standard setting and adjust Idle screw to get a normal idle with hand off the throttle. Once the engine is warm, turn in L screw enough to get a faster idle and then back off Idle screw to get a normal idle
i know this was a while back but did you figure out the problem ? I have a MS270C with exact same issues. Thanks, Ross
The issue was a bad coil. I replaced the coil and was back in operation. Good luck!