I’d go for a 281 to start with, as it is almost a 288 and probably cheaper. As you can still buy 288 top ends, buy a 281 run it, love it and leave it or hate it, refresh it, and convert it to a 288.
Haha they are messy trees the old macro's but it's good wood and every farm has a heap of them and luckily just leave all the brush there for the 20t digger to pile it up and burnView attachment 779601
I'm also from NZ @Bob Hedgecutter and hear exactly what you're saying. I'm way more of a Stihl guy (with lots of saws) but do have a soft spot for the 2 series Huskys. Heres a 288 I built earlier in the year and sold to a friend. What an awesome old saw with a very distinctive Ping....Ping,ping...ping sound when idling. You'll love yours. I've also just obtained enough parts to build another 3 or 4!
View attachment 779543 View attachment 779544
Is most certainly a low top, high tops were not readily available here until the 3 series saws came out.
We are not big on saw modification here, if you need more power or better filtration- you just buy a bigger saw or one with better filtration...... like those red Swedish saws I like.
My 288 has a high top. I got it off a dealer after the owner decided not to fix it.
I'm supposed to sell it so I can put money into other projects.....but I don't want to.
That is one sweet looking build- doubt mine will ever be that clean!
So did you drop the decomp and plug the cylinder- or is it rebuilt with a non decomp cylinder?
Raumati, sell a project then... sorted.
Still waiting for the saw?
Can you tell yet what make of cylinder is on your saw? It does look really clean for an old saw. Maybe someone has already done some work to it before you got it? I recently got a Meteor cylinder kit for my 288 and it looks pretty good. I checked the timing numbers and they are almost identical to the original Mahle cylinder that came on the saw. It also has a desirable .020" squish with no base gasket.
Enter your email address to join: