Tear downs are rather enjoyable eh!
Spent time today cleaning and reassembling the SP80
Going to see how it runs soon
Yes indeed. I thoroughly enjoy breaking my saws down and cleaning them up, making new gaskets, replacing seals, etc... Getting it all back together and making it breath fire again. The early rotary valve saws are my favorites to work on and tune. Love those big beasts especially the 73 and 77.
My 77 is probably my best runner out of all my saws. I rebuilt the fuel primer, Oiler, carb, fuel pump, made new gaskets from material, new points and got it all back together and nine times out of ten it will start and run on one pull. Just a fine piece of machinery. Luckily the wear plate is like new along with the piston and cylinder in great shape so it's like a new saw.
With the high speed fuel lever dialed in it only takes one click to four cycle or the other direction two cycle in the cut. I've got a 36" roller nose on it with 9/16 chipper and it cuts like a knife in butter. I got lucky and found a NOS side cover which has a new wear plate, bearing and crank seal so I can get one of my 73 saws running properly.
Parts are out there for these oldcsaws if your patient they surface here and there. I've been lucky finding parts for the fifties saws. I've got a 42" hard nose on my 73 with snorkel air filter with stout compression so with the new side cover it should run great after I get it together and tuned.... Most rewarding to bring these old saws back to life. No new paint however that ruins the saw for me. History and battle scars are gone, lost so I keep the original patina on mine... Just spun up a loop of 5/8" chipper for my 73...piles up the chips quick...
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