Husqvarna Gal

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Kasey47

ArboristSite Lurker
Joined
Nov 10, 2024
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Location
wisconsin
Greetings all from Northern Wisconsin. Just a younger lady here that inherited all of my late father's beloved well used and forgotten chainsaws. Some still ran, but I have overhauled restored to running condition his 50 Rancher and 268XP. I was 5 years old and vividly remember playing on the floor at the hardware store when he purchased the Rancher. I am also a mechanic by trade, so technical jargon is welcome here.
I reset new axe handles for fun and enjoy refreshing axe heads and dressing up the whole bit with wood burning and linseed oil. I was raised by my father and he taught me all he knew as a shade tree mechanic/street racer of the late 50's.

I am having trouble rebuilding the chain brake handle on my 268XP. One of the dogs was broken on the knee link and the forked spring was also in two pieces. I purchased replacement parts, but am baffled how the coil spring is installed. Any help on this would be appreciated.
 
Welcome to AS - YAY another "gal"!
Idk anything about chainsaws though. :p
I came here eight years ago for advice on purchasing a chainsaw, but, eventually decided a sawsall was what I really needed.
Lots of great members here with lots of knowledge on just about everything.
Hope you stay with us awhile. :)
 
A warm Welcome to you, from Wales 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 UK 🇬🇧 As for the brake spring it's a bit fiddly and requires a lot of patience and a good screwdriver! YouTube is your best bet for a tutorial! good luck 👍
Thank you for the suggestion and warm welcome. Perhaps this design spans across othe models I am not aware? I ran the YouTube search on the 268xp and only found a poorly shot video from another country on a cell phone. English was not the language, so it was quite worthless.
 

I did watch this video a couple times. He gives no insight to the internal spring in the plastic flag handle. Just tells you to not mess with it.. 😒🫤
When I disassembled mine - because of the previous carnage - it was like a peanut can of springy snakes. Everything flew out and the coil spring was later found in the pocket of my hooded sweatshirt. I did not intend on messing with the internals of the plastic flag handle, but it was bestowed upon me. I have all the pieces and parts.
 
Welcome to AS - YAY another "gal"!
Idk anything about chainsaws though. :p
I came here eight years ago for advice on purchasing a chainsaw, but, eventually decided a sawsall was what I really needed.
Lots of great members here with lots of knowledge on just about everything.
Hope you stay with us awhile. :)
Sawzalls are great! I started with a few when I lived in town. They were perfect for what I needed. I had a coworker challenge me to fix his Poulan and he opened pandoras box. Fixed two Poulans and threw away a wild thing because it was absolute garbage. My career changed and I moved to the country. Now I fix, sharpen and maintain 5 saws for my husband. It works out well! Thank you for the warm welcome, I enjoy learning new things and hopefully I can help someone else in the long run.
 
I love Tinman. Great instructional videos, plus he gives you the pros and cons of porting saws. This is a metal flag handle. Completely different design. I'll post a picture of my headache once the sun rises.
Yeah, I figured that... @singinwoodwackr asked for it tho ;)
Might help to look at the 268 IPL too if you haven't already
 
Lock two long/4" bolts into the bench vice spaced apart to fit through the holes where the bar studs reside, slip the clutch cover on over the bolts and voila the clutch cover is captured and can be worked on much easier than chasing it around the bench top.
 

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