Fish
Tree Freak
After enduring this years onslaught of "tech" schools, I have
listened to endless drivel about how a compression gauge is
a neccessary tool for the 2 cycle tech. I have one, but never
have even been tempted to use it! It is kind of useless to me
and my approach to repair. I must be missing something.
I worked on a Shindaiwa trimmer once that ran , but poorly.
The compression was not that great, so I removed the muffler.
One ring was worn into 2 pieces, and after disassembly, the
other ring was worn paper thin on one side. Putting a new pair
of rings and a new gasket, the trimmer ran like new again.
It was actually an old Green Machine which was a Shindaiwa
T-25. But back to the topic, I have never had the occaision to
waste any time screwing in a compression gauge to tell me
what was fairly obvious. In a high performance/racing scenario
it may be helpful, but in general repair, it is a useless tool, like a
coil tester.
listened to endless drivel about how a compression gauge is
a neccessary tool for the 2 cycle tech. I have one, but never
have even been tempted to use it! It is kind of useless to me
and my approach to repair. I must be missing something.
I worked on a Shindaiwa trimmer once that ran , but poorly.
The compression was not that great, so I removed the muffler.
One ring was worn into 2 pieces, and after disassembly, the
other ring was worn paper thin on one side. Putting a new pair
of rings and a new gasket, the trimmer ran like new again.
It was actually an old Green Machine which was a Shindaiwa
T-25. But back to the topic, I have never had the occaision to
waste any time screwing in a compression gauge to tell me
what was fairly obvious. In a high performance/racing scenario
it may be helpful, but in general repair, it is a useless tool, like a
coil tester.