Stihl MS 250 Chainsaw Won’t Start | Fast Fixes

Most MS 250 start failures trace to bad mix, a flooded cylinder, weak spark, or a clogged intake—run these checks in order.

If your MS 250 refuses to fire, you don’t need guesswork—you need a clear order of operations. The steps below start with the fastest wins and move toward deeper fixes. Work top to bottom, test after each step, and you’ll pinpoint the fault without tearing the saw apart twice.

Why Your Stihl 250 Won’t Start: Quick Checks

Two-stroke engines are simple. They need fresh fuel at the right ratio, compression, spark at the right time, and air moving in and out. When one of those pillars falls short, the starter rope keeps tugging with no reward. Start with the basics: confirm fuel freshness, clear flooding, and verify spark. Then move to air and exhaust, and finally to metering parts inside the carburetor.

Fast Diagnostic Table

Use this table to match the symptom you see with the most likely cause and the first fix to try.

Symptom Likely Cause Try This First
Pulls with zero “pop” Old fuel or wrong ratio; no spark Drain and refill with fresh 50:1; test spark plug
Fires once, then dies Flooded cylinder; wet plug Clear flood; dry/replace plug; warm-start position
Strong fuel smell from muffler Over-choked; stuck choke; leaking needle Open throttle, no choke, pull 6–10 times
Starts, won’t idle Clogged air filter; gummed carb Clean/replace filter; fresh fuel; light carb clean
Starts, dies under throttle Spark arrestor screen blocked Remove and clean screen; retest
Won’t start hot Flooding or weak coil when warm Warm-start lever position; test spark hot
Vacuum “hiss” when opening cap Tanked vent stuck Crack cap to test; replace vent if needed

Set Up A Known-Good Starting Baseline

Before chasing obscure faults, lock in the simple stuff so each pull tells you something.

1) Fuel Mix That The Saw Likes

Mix fresh unleaded with quality two-stroke oil at 50:1. Measure, don’t eyeball. If the fuel in your can is older than a couple of months or smells sour, recycle it and start fresh. Old blend loses volatility, leaves gum in the carb, and can soak the plug without ever lighting. Label the can with the date so you don’t wonder later.

How To Purge Bad Fuel

  • Drain the tank into a waste container.
  • Swish a small splash of fresh blend in the tank and drain that, too.
  • Refill with fresh 50:1 and leave the cap snug but not overtight.

2) Lever Positions That Work

The master control lever has four positions: stop, run, warm-start/fast-idle, and full choke. Cold motor: set to full choke, pull until it “burps,” then bump to warm-start and pull again until it lights. Warm motor: skip full choke and use warm-start. If it stalls right after the first fire, move the lever to run and give a small blip to set idle.

3) A Plug That Actually Sparks

Pull the plug boot, remove the plug, and inspect. Black and wet means flooding; dry and tan is fine; snow-white can signal a lean run. Gap the plug to spec, then ground it against the cylinder and pull the rope. A crisp blue snap means the ignition is alive. No spark? Swap in a known-good plug before suspecting the coil.

Clear Flooding And Recover A Wet Cylinder

Over-choking or a sticky carb needle can push raw fuel into the crankcase and muffler. The motor can’t fire until you move that fuel out.

  1. Move the lever to run (no choke).
  2. Hold full throttle; keep the chain brake on.
  3. Pull 6–10 times. Listen for the pitch to change.
  4. If still soaked, remove the plug, pull the rope a few times to vent mist, and let the cylinder air out for 10 minutes.
  5. Install a dry plug and try the warm-start position.

If flooding returns quickly, plan on a carburetor refresh—stuck metering parts or stiff diaphragms feed too much fuel at rest.

Air In, Air Out: Filters And Spark Arrestor

The intake and exhaust paths can choke a two-stroke even when spark and fuel are perfect. A dirty filter or a carbon-packed arrestor screen often shows up as a saw that starts, revs poorly, and stalls with any load.

Service The Air Filter

  • Pop the top cover and lift the filter.
  • Tap loose dust away from the intake side. Wash in warm soapy water if it’s oily; rinse and dry fully.
  • Replace if the media looks torn, stiff, or permanently stained.

Clean The Spark Arrestor Screen

  • Remove the muffler outlet cover and slide out the fine mesh screen.
  • Gently burn off carbon with a propane torch or brush it with a brass brush. Don’t deform the mesh.
  • Reinstall and confirm the outlet is clear.

A blocked screen can mimic carburetor trouble. Clearing it takes minutes and often brings back clean throttle response.

Ignition Tune: Plug, Gap, And Coil Basics

The correct plug and gap give you a hot, reliable spark. A tired plug can waste a morning of pulls.

Plug Type And Gap

Use the correct heat range and set the gap to spec. Keep a spare in your toolbox so you can rule the plug out instantly during diagnosis.

  • Remove plug and check the insulator. Oily and black? Swap it.
  • Set the gap with a feeler gauge; don’t guess with a key.
  • Push the boot on firmly until it clicks.

Coil And Module Checks

If a known-good plug shows no spark, inspect the kill-switch wiring for abrasion or a stray ground. Check the coil air gap at the flywheel with a thin card. If spark cuts out when the saw warms, the module can be failing under heat; confirm with a spark tester while hot.

Fuel Delivery: Carburetor And Lines

Fresh fuel won’t help if it never meters correctly. Rubber parts age, screens plug with varnish, and the saw acts flooded or starved.

Quick Fuel System Tests

  • Primer bulb soft or empty after pulls: Air leak or blocked pickup.
  • Fuel line cracks: Replace line and filter as a set.
  • Damp carb body: Gasket seep or loose screws; snug evenly.

When A Light Carb Clean Is Enough

Remove the carb, peel the pump cover and metering cover, and clean the fine screen under the pump side with carb-safe spray. Replace diaphragms if they feel stiff or curled. Reinstall with fresh gaskets and test. Many “no-start” calls end here.

Hot-Start Troubles: Wins That Save Time

A warm saw that refuses to relight often points to a rich restart or a weak spark under heat.

  • Skip full choke when warm; use the fast-idle slot instead.
  • If it loads up during idle breaks, crack the throttle on restart.
  • Carry a spare plug. If a swap lights it instantly, replace the old one and keep moving.

Vent, Compression, And Other Gotchas

Three less obvious issues can keep a healthy engine from lighting: a stuck tank vent, low compression, or a slipped flywheel key.

Tank Vent

If opening the fuel cap releases a strong hiss and the saw fires right after, the vent likely sticks shut under vacuum. Replace the vent; it’s a small part with outsized headaches.

Compression

A warm reading below the mid-120s psi often points to ring wear or a scored piston. A quick shot of mix oil into the cylinder that lifts compression suggests ring sealing loss. At that stage, plan a top-end inspection.

Timing

A sheared flywheel key can shift timing just enough to kill the spark event. Pull the flywheel and inspect the key if every other path checks out.

Reference Specs And Setup Targets

Keep this short list handy when you tune or test. It trims guesswork and speeds diagnosis.

Item Spec / Target Notes
Fuel blend 50:1 (gas:oil) Measure by volume; mix fresh
Spark plug type NGK BPMR7A Keep a spare in the case
Spark plug gap 0.7 mm Use a gauge, not a guess
Air filter Clean, intact media Wash and fully dry or replace
Spark arrestor Screen clear of carbon Remove, burn/brush, reinstall
Chain oil Tank drains near fuel tank Confirms oiler is feeding
Carb diaphragms Soft, flat Replace if stiff or curled

Step-By-Step Start Routine That Works

Once the saw is sound, this routine gives you a clean first light and fewer flooded restarts.

  1. Engage the chain brake. Fill fuel and bar-oil tanks.
  2. Set full choke for a cold motor. Pull until the first “burp.”
  3. Move to fast-idle/warm-start and pull again until it lights.
  4. Tap the throttle to drop to idle; let it settle for a few seconds.
  5. Warm restarts use fast-idle only—skip full choke unless it ran dry.

When To Stop And Service

If you’ve worked through fresh fuel, a known-good plug, a clear filter and screen, and a basic carb clean, yet the saw still won’t light or dies on throttle, you’re likely facing a deeper carb rebuild, a failing ignition module, or top-end wear. At that point, a pressure/vac test of the crankcase, a full carb kit, and a new coil become the right next steps. That path costs less than throwing parts at the saw blindly and gives you a reliable fix.

Safety Notes While You Troubleshoot

  • Engage the chain brake during every pull.
  • Work in a ventilated area; spilled blend flashes quickly.
  • Let hot parts cool before pulling the muffler screen.
  • After any carb or ignition work, confirm the chain stops at idle.

Trusted References You Can Bookmark

Keep two resources handy: the model-family instruction manual for lever positions, maintenance, and safety, and a clear fuel-mix guide for consistent 50:1 blending. Linking these near your tool bench saves time the next time starting trouble shows up.