Car-guy2
ArboristSite Member
Picked up an 026 that wouldn't run unless you primed it. Checked the usual: fuel lines, carb., choke. Finally checked compression and it was 90 psi. Tore the saw down and ring gap was huge and piston skirt worn.
I bought a meteor piston with caber rings. Polished the cylinder with scotch brite pad and checked new ring in cylinder. End gap was .008. Set squish at .023. Saw starts and runs well after tuning. Put a tank of gas through it and checked compression. It's only 130 psi. Checked a couple other saws cause I suspected gauge was bad. My old 041 that runs great showed 90 psi. I thought "OK gauge is bad". Then I checked my 024 that I got used and have cut with for 4 years and it pulled 150.
So today I got another gauge and 026 checked 130 cold and 120 hot.
Is this saw gonna get better with use? And how can my 041 run so well with only 90 psi? Both gauges are older, could I have gotten 2 gauges that are off by the same amount?
I've gotten a ton of useful info on this site. Thanks in advance for any insight on this.
I bought a meteor piston with caber rings. Polished the cylinder with scotch brite pad and checked new ring in cylinder. End gap was .008. Set squish at .023. Saw starts and runs well after tuning. Put a tank of gas through it and checked compression. It's only 130 psi. Checked a couple other saws cause I suspected gauge was bad. My old 041 that runs great showed 90 psi. I thought "OK gauge is bad". Then I checked my 024 that I got used and have cut with for 4 years and it pulled 150.
So today I got another gauge and 026 checked 130 cold and 120 hot.
Is this saw gonna get better with use? And how can my 041 run so well with only 90 psi? Both gauges are older, could I have gotten 2 gauges that are off by the same amount?
I've gotten a ton of useful info on this site. Thanks in advance for any insight on this.