Thanks for that video of all the parts of that video. I'm thinking about getting the pink way but first would like to know in your opinion, which one is the best? I'm certainly not going to hold anybody to anything I just was wondering what you think is the best watching the videos the pink wages seem to run better. Please correct me if I'm wrong thanks again.
@@douglasberg4681 i can't really pick a "best". I do use the Pinkway more, if that tells you anything. All three run great. I've kinda found a different purpose for each one. I explain in more detail in my latest update.
Because of the manufacturing, these saws need broken in. I recommend idling off and on for several heats. 10-15 minute intervals. Use a lot of oil in the initial mix 25:1. Then proceed to rev the saw up off and on, followed by tuning. Cut with a tank or two and then go back to a 40:1 mix. Amsoil dominator is a good two cycle oil for chainsaws. Try to use ethanol free gasoline. Maintain your saw and you should have a good period of use. Once the tree is on the ground, you should be able to buck a cord or so of wood on one tank. I suggest a log splitter, 25 ton or greater. Have fun!
I will run the first tank or two @ 25:1. I also put some oil on the piston and in the crank case before ever starting them. I will idle them for a few minutes at first start, but much more than that is a waste. One thing I recommend is not running high RPM unless in the wood for the first few tanks.
Good video. That orange saw seems to cut the best I find. Does it have dual port or quad port cylinders? I bought a different brand of saw than these and right away noticed a bunch of scoring in the cylinder. I think they run them on the assembly line and they probably don’t let them warm up at all and just hold them wide open. I find that you’re tuning of the saws prior to use is a bit lean on the high jet. You should hear pretty good 4 stroking while just free revving them before they’re in the wood and I didn’t hear that. It could’ve led to some of the additional scoring.
The Yizbao does feel faster/more powerful. I am curious if it is closer to 60CC and the other two are only 54CC. The Pinkway is a quad port cylinder, I believe the other two are as well. I haven't taken them apart yet. I usually lean the high jet out until I reach max RPM and than fatten it up until it drops a few hundred RPM. It may be a little lean but everything looks nice and oily inside when I tear them apart. The 30* temp swings this time of year don't help the tune much either.
@@mikeroberts4518 I do tend to favor the Pinkway. All three are good saws. I keep the Pinkway and the Wemars with my sawmill. I mounted a debarking tool on the Wemars.
These all appear to be the same saw. Just different color plastic.
They are all copies of the same saw but are clearly manufactured differently.
Thanks for that video of all the parts of that video. I'm thinking about getting the pink way but first would like to know in your opinion, which one is the best? I'm certainly not going to hold anybody to anything I just was wondering what you think is the best watching the videos the pink wages seem to run better. Please correct me if I'm wrong thanks again.
@@douglasberg4681 i can't really pick a "best". I do use the Pinkway more, if that tells you anything. All three run great. I've kinda found a different purpose for each one. I explain in more detail in my latest update.
Because of the manufacturing, these saws need broken in. I recommend idling off and on for several heats. 10-15 minute intervals. Use a lot of oil in the initial mix 25:1. Then proceed to rev the saw up off and on, followed by tuning. Cut with a tank or two and then go back to a 40:1 mix. Amsoil dominator is a good two cycle oil for chainsaws. Try to use ethanol free gasoline. Maintain your saw and you should have a good period of use. Once the tree is on the ground, you should be able to buck a cord or so of wood on one tank. I suggest a log splitter, 25 ton or greater. Have fun!
I will run the first tank or two @ 25:1. I also put some oil on the piston and in the crank case before ever starting them. I will idle them for a few minutes at first start, but much more than that is a waste. One thing I recommend is not running high RPM unless in the wood for the first few tanks.
Real men split wood with an axe and they like it.
Good video. That orange saw seems to cut the best I find. Does it have dual port or quad port cylinders?
I bought a different brand of saw than these and right away noticed a bunch of scoring in the cylinder. I think they run them on the assembly line and they probably don’t let them warm up at all and just hold them wide open.
I find that you’re tuning of the saws prior to use is a bit lean on the high jet. You should hear pretty good 4 stroking while just free revving them before they’re in the wood and I didn’t hear that.
It could’ve led to some of the additional scoring.
The Yizbao does feel faster/more powerful. I am curious if it is closer to 60CC and the other two are only 54CC. The Pinkway is a quad port cylinder, I believe the other two are as well. I haven't taken them apart yet.
I usually lean the high jet out until I reach max RPM and than fatten it up until it drops a few hundred RPM. It may be a little lean but everything looks nice and oily inside when I tear them apart. The 30* temp swings this time of year don't help the tune much either.
So who won seem like the purple one took it in the time trials
@@mikeroberts4518 I do tend to favor the Pinkway. All three are good saws. I keep the Pinkway and the Wemars with my sawmill. I mounted a debarking tool on the Wemars.
Same saws, different color…
Basically. They are clearly manufactured differently, but all based off the same saw.
Which one is manufacturered best?
@@s123fro Build quality is about the same between all three, I could not choose one that is better than the other.