«Previous    Next»
Power Starter Fits Any Chainsaw
Recoil starters on chainsaws and other equipment can be difficult to use, but not if you do it Carman Fedele’s way. He uses a power drill to start his chainsaw.
    “I remove the recoil unit from the flywheel and attach a flange with a short length of notched pipe,” explains Fedele. “The flange has 2 bolt holes that match holes in the original starter. A shank with a pin in the end matches the notches.”
    He points out that the notches angle away from the drive direction of the flywheel. To start his chainsaw, Fedele mounts the shank in a battery-powered drill and slips the pin into the notches.
    “You have to hold the drill pretty solid, as there is pretty good resistance until the flywheel comes up to compression,” says Fedele. “Once it does, the drill with the bolt and pin automatically kicks out.”
    The only other modification Fedele made on his Dolmar chainsaw was to drill an access hole in the plastic plate that once enclosed the recoil unit. It provides access for the notched pipe.
    At age 83, Fedele doesn’t use the chainsaw that much but when he does it’s an easy start. This is one of many ideas he has had over the years to do things a better way (Vol. 39, No. 1).
    “I have muscles in my shoulder that are giving me problems,” he says. “When I have trouble sleeping, I think about ideas that will make it easier to do things like this.”
    Contact: FARM SHOW Followup, Carman Fedele, Sr., 1 Main St., Tidioute, Penn. 16351 (ph 814 730-9377).


  Click here to download page story appeared in.



  Click here to read entire issue




To read the rest of this story, download this issue below or click here to register with your account number.
Order the Issue Containing This Story
2020 - Volume #44, Issue #3