Hi. I'm new to the site and hope someone can guide me towards getting my saw running again. As the title says, the crank bearing on the chain side of the saw self destructed and resulted in the saw locking up. Unfortunately, this saw is only a couple of years old and used mainly for cutting 5-6 cords of firewood per year. Upon teardown, I found a broken oil pump, scored piston/cylinder, and what appeared to be contact between the coil and the flywheel. Although scored, the piston cleaned up pretty good with some fine scotchbrite and the cylinder was not scratched too deeply. Anyhow, I ordered new crank bearings and seals, new oil pump, and new rings for good measure. Upon reassembly, I ran into a couple of problems. Spark was good, compression was around 100 PSI on my cheapo gauge, and fuel was being drawn into the cylinder, but the saw wouldn't start. I did set the coil gap with the Stihl gauge. The main issue I ran into was the fit of the new bearings and possible clearance issues on the new oil pump. I'm measuring .006" interference between the bearing faces and the inside face of the bearing saddle. They were tight going in, but I was able to tap them into place without too much of a problem. Also, (and this may be related to the bearing interference), my oil pump drive is getting pinched between the cover washer and the oil pump body when I tighten up the clutch. So, either the oil pump body is too wide, or the step on the crankshaft is sitting below the top of the pump drive. I do have a couple of questions:
Jim
- Is there a specification on the bearing clearance and is .006" too tight?
- What's the best way to seat the bearings on the crankshaft?
- Can any RTV be used to seal the crankcase or is something special required?
- Are there baseline settings for carburetor adjustments in terms of number of turns from fully closed?
- Other than a visual spark, is there anyway to check coil performance?
- What's the best plug to use on this saw?
- Anything else I should look at?
Jim