I have a Jonsered 451EV that for some reason all of a sudden it shears flywheel keys after every 5-10 minutes of running. I never had any problems with this saw before. Does anybody have a clue what could be going on?
Excellent detailed instructions. Only thing I can add is that Clover valve lapping compound is cheap and easy to find and comes in two grits to a container. I reckon that'd do the trick nicely.
How tight should that nut be?
Two things, either the flywheel nut is not being tightened enough or the taper in the flywheel its self has been damaged. The taper is what holds the flywheel to the crank, if damaged it will move and shear the key. The key is just an alignment device to align the flywheel for timing, when the nut is tightened properly the flywheel is jammed tightly to the crank and will stay put.
A damaged taper can be corrected by using valve grinding compound between the crank and flywheel to reseat it. 3-4 applications of compond and rocking the flywheel back and forth will restore the taper. The compound must then be thoroughly removed, the bore and crank stub must be squeaky clean and dry before resssembly.
Two things, either the flywheel nut is not being tightened enough or the taper in the flywheel its self has been damaged. The taper is what holds the flywheel to the crank, if damaged it will move and shear the key. The key is just an alignment device to align the flywheel for timing, when the nut is tightened properly the flywheel is jammed tightly to the crank and will stay put.
A damaged taper can be corrected by using valve grinding compound between the crank and flywheel to reseat it. 3-4 applications of compond and rocking the flywheel back and forth will restore the taper. The compound must then be thoroughly removed, the bore and crank stub must be squeaky clean and dry before resssembly.
13 years later and this post is still relevant. I damaged by flywheel/key and thought I was screwed but I just tightened the flywheel and it works now, minus the key. Thanks!Two things, either the flywheel nut is not being tightened enough or the taper in the flywheel its self has been damaged. The taper is what holds the flywheel to the crank, if damaged it will move and shear the key. The key is just an alignment device to align the flywheel for timing, when the nut is tightened properly the flywheel is jammed tightly to the crank and will stay put.
A damaged taper can be corrected by using valve grinding compound between the crank and flywheel to reseat it. 3-4 applications of compond and rocking the flywheel back and forth will restore the taper. The compound must then be thoroughly removed, the bore and crank stub must be squeaky clean and dry before resssembly.
Oil filter wrench! good tip, thanksI get it on there as tight as I can with a normal 3/8 drive ratchet and the flywheel held stationary with a strap wrench, oil filter wrench, or the like. (I don't recommend the screwdriver trick on flywheels, especially newer ones... they can't take the stress) Have not encountered problems so far.
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