gritz
ArboristSite Guru
Okay, so this is the story. I'm trying to build a saw for my brother-in-law on the cheap. I took a burnt up piston and cylinder and honed the cylinder to get the aluminum transfer off. Then I installed a new Meteor piston and rings, fuel line, fuel filter, impulse line, intake boot, and oil seals. I got it running fine, had 145-150 psi of compression. I went to cut with it and it dug in a little, then fell on its face. Tuned it a little richer to see if it just needed a little help, same effect. Took it back inside, pressure tested again and everything checked out fine. Took the spark plug out and found what looked like scoring. Pulled the cylinder and this is what I found.
Intake side
Exhaust Side
Take special note of the missing plating where the piston was most likely slapping
Piston - Exhaust Side
Intake Side
It appears that there is little damage to the piston really. It seems like maybe the chrome cylinder lining started to flake off and then just started sanding the chrome off the whole cylinder. There was fine metallic film all over everything in there. Did I possibly hone too much? Has anybody else experienced this? This is my first time trying to put an aftermarket piston in a stock, cleaned cylinder.
Intake side
Exhaust Side
Take special note of the missing plating where the piston was most likely slapping
Piston - Exhaust Side
Intake Side
It appears that there is little damage to the piston really. It seems like maybe the chrome cylinder lining started to flake off and then just started sanding the chrome off the whole cylinder. There was fine metallic film all over everything in there. Did I possibly hone too much? Has anybody else experienced this? This is my first time trying to put an aftermarket piston in a stock, cleaned cylinder.