The Supers are the last of a long line of hot-rod 87cc McCullochs, you need one Ron.
I need another saw like I need another hole in my head... but maybe a swap is in order, hmmm. Ron
The Supers are the last of a long line of hot-rod 87cc McCullochs, you need one Ron.
I need another saw like I need another hole in my head... but maybe a swap is in order, hmmm. Ron
Ya gotta beat my 14 SD166's at once.
Lee
Do it, Ron .... Super 250s are 'in a club' all their own!
Have fun topping Joey. [video=youtube;DZbOUxKlHN4]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DZbOUxKlHN4[/video] Ron
Just told they fit the SP125 mount, which is most Macs of that time. If I can get them at a decent price that is. Gaurds hard to find if they're not on them?
Ya gotta beat my 14 SD166's at once.
Lee
You have the link to that?
My dad gave me his Mac 10-10 around 20 years ago. I used it off and on during that time then it sat in my shop for about 5 years.
It had a 16" bar on it when my dad had it, I put a 20" bar on it around 15 years ago.
I recently pulled it off the shelf, put some fuel and bar oil in it and it fired up second pull.
Cut a few trees around the yard and then couldn't get it started again.
Ordered a couple of new fuel filters, fuel line, carb rebuild kit, plugs and a new Oregon, chisel tooth chain.
Compression is great so I'm hoping the carb kit will do the trick. Spark is OK but doesn't seem to be bluish so I may need to address that also.
I'd like to have the Mac around for larger diameter stuff and as a backup.
Love the sound of it too.
Just bought a Husky 445 for smaller trees, limbing and occasional firewood cutting.
If I can get the Mac running dependably, I think the saws will compliment each other and cover what I need to cut.
I have an interesting issue. One of my 10-10's doesn't oil very well, but the manual oiler works fine. I pulled the B&C off and monitored oil flow while running (after I primed it manually so I know all the air was out), it seems to work some at idle but it doesn't really increase much at all when increasing and holding steady RPM's. I can rev it up and down and it really doesn't change from a slow drip. This is with the oiler set wide open (screw out as far as it will go). When I then go to use the manual one it takes a few squirts for it to prime itself again....WTF? I just primed it before but somehow air got back in the line in the 45 seconds it was running...? I then decided to swap auto oilers with another 10-10 which I know works good. I put that oiler in and it basically did the same thing. I then put it back in the donor saw where it came from and it works like it's supposed to again. It has a steady stream of oil when holding higher rpm's, like I would expect. What would cause a known good pump not to work in one saw but works great in another? I checked the check valve in the pickup line by sucking on the screened end and I created vacuum. I blew in it and it and it blew out fine.
Are there any check valves or any other valves in the passage ways of the case?
Any ideas?? Can one saw just give better "impulses" which drives the oiler better than another saw?
thanks!
Welcome to AS!
You'll find that the 10-10 have torque that belie their size.
I have friends that interpret 'lots of torque' as equalling 'lack of speed' ...
... but my 10-10 saws will go places theirs can only dream of.