dce1843
ArboristSite Operative
I'm about to order a aftermarket piston for my echo 670. Some of them have only 1 ring while others have 2. My original had 2. Does it really matter ?
What do you mean by 2 different ring lands in the cylinder ?Maybe I only know enough to be dangerous also, A single ring should benefit in the cooling aspect as it has more contact with the oil that sticks to the sides of the cylinder. That is compared to the top ring of a two set up. If it came with 2 it has lands inside the cylinder for two different positions of ring ends.
Can you link to this thread? What saw?Count it as hearsay, but I read a thread about a bastard saw design that was both made by multiple companies (Poulan/Craftsman/McCulloch, iirc), and two went the single ring route and both were known to have the piston bounce off the cylinder wall, only the third company had a saw that was actually worth something
There's no real benefit to having more than one ring in these two cycle engines. A single ring or thin ring piston is normally considered and upgrade, not the opposite. Some models were made with all the above, the thin ring and single ring variations are the most desirable.I'd go direct, OEM, part#-off-the-IPL drop-in replacement. That was what the saw was designed and built with, and you know it works.
This is just my opinion: If a newer design has less parts, its usually because the manuf's bean-counters want to bring down production costs and rake in more profit. Count it as hearsay, but I read a thread about a bastard saw design that was both made by multiple companies (Poulan/Craftsman/McCulloch, iirc), and two went the single ring route and both were known to have the piston bounce off the cylinder wall, only the third company had a saw that was actually worth something.
Its your money, so paddle thru the creek at your own pace.
You could get the two ring piston and run just a single ring and have the second one for a spare.Sounds like I might as well just get the piston with only one ring then. Thanks for the input. I was just thinking it might have a negative impact on compression but I reckon not
I didn't bookmark it but I am sure I came across it while trying to find compatible parts for my Craftsman Incredi-Pull 55cc chainsaw. I recall the guy used the word bean counter (or beancounter/bean-counter, etc) in the thread.Can you link to this thread? What saw?
To each their own. Personally, I think two rings would help keep a piston aligned (however marginally) & from hitting the cyl wall at higher RPM vs only one, but I am no mechanical engineer.A single ring or thin ring piston is normally considered and upgrade, not the opposite.
Would that really work...?You could get the two ring piston and run just a single ring and have the second one for a spare.
That saw was never a Poulan, nor related to one. No idea if it's been made with both 1 and 2 rings, but I kinda doubt it. I suspect the story is the usual confusion about the various models/designs/brands.I didn't bookmark it but I am sure I came across it while trying to find compatible parts for my Craftsman Incredi-Pull 55cc chainsaw. I recall the guy used the word bean counter (or beancounter/bean-counter, etc) in the thread.
It's an EPA thing, nothing to do with performance.Why do the heavy hitter Swed saws go with 2 if it isn't necessary?
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