It takes a lot to impress a chicken.They are less than thrilled. They always get super offended whenever I fire up a saw.
It takes a lot to impress a chicken.They are less than thrilled. They always get super offended whenever I fire up a saw.
Oh man, lol. Yeah I definitely ruffled some feathers!You could say you fell foul of them.
I personally like Sea Foam's product called DeepCreep , which I soak every possible port with then plastic bag it for a month, go back and try to rotate the flywheel by hand and repeat if necessary.Hello fellow Loggers! I just recently acquired a McCulloch Super 797 (model number indicates 66251?). I was able to locate a IPL sheet as well as a Clymers snippet regarding Service Manual (much thanks)…however, I am still on the hunt for a operators manual.
Unfortunately for me, this chainsaw has a stuck piston….good news is that it doesn’t appear to be scored (view from the exhaust port). I have it soaking with Marvel Mystery Oil via spark plug hole (I tried PB-Blaster…soaked for 12 hours….no luck). I will give the mystery oil soak for a couple days and see what gives next…
I read where the technique is to let it soak for a couple of days…then drain out the oil and apply heat (via heat Electrical Gun) to the head area and try to turn the crank with a ratchet wrench.
Question: Does anyone have any better suggestions or ideas of how to unstick the piston? *Note that I was told it was last running about 5+ years ago. More than likely, it is ring seized from setting too long…
ALSO: How the heck does the Decompression valve assembly work on this saw? I flipped the lever off of the clip and….well I am not sure exactly what it is suppose to do? Does it open the valve or something? Maybe mine is stuck? Dunno? Thoughts?
FINALLY: If anyone has a PDF of the Operators Manuals Manual for this…it would certainly make my day (been scouring the net… no such luck yet! HELP!
I have the exact same problem with mine.ALLLSOOOO: I have a McCulloch PM610. Yup, got it at the dump…. And got it running pretty darn good! Problem is, that it leaks bad oil like a sieve. When I set the saw down (say overnight), there is a large puddle in the morning. I read the threads that stated it was the ball check or something and I should cycle through some Marvel Mystery Oil through it to get things back in order. NOTE: that the manual pump works fine (no probelm…other than the button sticks in and I have to pull it out each time…..in which I ordered a spare and am going to swap it out….or file doen the plastic “shelf” that the clip rides on as I believe this is that problem resolve).
Back to th original issue…any other ideas to get it to stop leaking out oil? I unscrewed out the adjustment until it finally started “auto oiling”. But now I have a mess each morning. Is the oil pump itself shot? Thoughts?
ALSO: How the heck does the Decompression valve assembly work on this saw? I flipped the lever off of the clip and….well I am not sure exactly what it is suppose to do? Does it open the valve or something? Maybe mine is stuck? Dunno? Thoughts?
ALLLSOOOO: I have a McCulloch PM610. Yup, got it at the dump…. And got it running pretty darn good! Problem is, that it leaks bad oil like a sieve. When I set the saw down (say overnight), there is a large puddle in the morning. I read the threads that stated it was the ball check or something and I should cycle through some Marvel Mystery Oil through it to get things back in order. NOTE: that the manual pump works fine (no probelm…other than the button sticks in and I have to pull it out each time…..in which I ordered a spare and am going to swap it out….or file doen the plastic “shelf” that the clip rides on as I believe this is that problem resolve).
Back to th original issue…any other ideas to get it to stop leaking out oil? I unscrewed out the adjustment until it finally started “auto oiling”. But now I have a mess each morning. Is the oil pump itself shot? Thoughts?
Doc McHeimann in addition to his general practice specializes in ten series oil pumps. In his absence, I will repeat my experience with an 82cc Mac that spewed oil when shelved so much so that when the original owner want to buy it back I gladly agreed. He reported that he fixed it by simply turning the flow adjusting screw back in a bit. Possibly that would fix your problem too.I have the exact same problem with mine.
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