Need Help Identifying MCculloch Chainsaw

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Picked This Up Out Of An Old Garage ,Been Sitting For Years ,Anyone Know The Model Of This saw ,Any Thoughts On Model ,Good? Bad ? ,Not Real Familiar With These McCulloch,
 

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It is a 1-45. The basic cylinder block could have been made into a 1-42 or 1-45 but that one got the 1-45 treatment. Better for you as the 1-45 has bearings in the piston (1-42 is just a bushing) and many 1-42 models did not include the lower brace. 80cc, manual oiler only.

Most of the 1-45 models came with the Walbro/MAC flatback carburetors. While they are a bit different, I think they actually perform better than the Tillotson HL counterparts. The flatback is a bit more sensitive to adjustments, and the primers often leak...

Mark
 
It's a 1-45 Mac.

A series of those Macs about same on parts/pieces.
1-40's, 1-50's, 250's.

Heavy saws, low speed, lots of torque, I've got some that I play with. I only use them after a log is down on the ground.
Just set the saw on top of the log and let the big 404 chain and weight of the saw do the cutting. Can drink a cup of coffee while it's cutting.

I converted the finelky flat back carbs to the Tillotson carb.
They have a sound of their own.

Does yours start and run?? Parts can be found on flea bay and some at chainsawr.com. I have a SERVICE manual that covers most all of them.
I have a 1-43 that has OEM owners manual and it's a low hour saw with the OEM chain and bar. Hard to start coming out of storage if you don't know their recipe for a cold start. (for most all of them series)
Mark Heimannm in the above post is the resident expert on Mac's. He helped me get mine going as I got experience with them.
 
It's a 1-45 Mac.

A series of those Macs about same on parts/pieces.
1-40's, 1-50's, 250's.

Heavy saws, low speed, lots of torque, I've got some that I play with. I only use them after a log is down on the ground.
Just set the saw on top of the log and let the big 404 chain and weight of the saw do the cutting. Can drink a cup of coffee while it's cutting.

I converted the finelky flat back carbs to the Tillotson carb.
They have a sound of their own.

Does yours start and run?? Parts can be found on flea bay and some at chainsawr.com. I have a SERVICE manual that covers most all of them.
I have a 1-43 that has OEM owners manual and it's a low hour saw with the OEM chain and bar. Hard to start coming out of storage if you don't know their recipe for a cold start. (for most all of them series)

Bruce Heimannm in the above post is the resident expert on Mac's. He helped me get mine going as I got experience with them.
Hello Okie, I recently acquired a 250 but don't know very much about it. I assume it is older than my 795, is that correct? Do you know what years the 250 was produced, and is there a way to tell the actual year my saw was made? If you have the manual in digital, that would be a great help. If so, could you post a link please, thanks :)
 
It is a 1-45. The basic cylinder block could have been made into a 1-42 or 1-45 but that one got the 1-45 treatment. Better for you as the 1-45 has bearings in the piston (1-42 is just a bushing) and many 1-42 models did not include the lower brace. 80cc, manual oiler only.

Most of the 1-45 models came with the Walbro/MAC flatback carburetors. While they are a bit different, I think they actually perform better than the Tillotson HL counterparts. The flatback is a bit more sensitive to adjustments, and the primers often leak...

Mark
Thanks For All The Great Info There,The Saw Is In Really Great Shape And Was Sold At A Local Dealer Here Close To Me According To A Sticker Thats On It,I Cleaned It All Up Good But I Have No Spark So I’ll Have To Try And Sand The Points And See If That Does It,I Appreciate Your Knowledge
 
It's a 1-45 Mac.

A series of those Macs about same on parts/pieces.
1-40's, 1-50's, 250's.

Heavy saws, low speed, lots of torque, I've got some that I play with. I only use them after a log is down on the ground.
Just set the saw on top of the log and let the big 404 chain and weight of the saw do the cutting. Can drink a cup of coffee while it's cutting.

I converted the finelky flat back carbs to the Tillotson carb.
They have a sound of their own.

Does yours start and run?? Parts can be found on flea bay and some at chainsawr.com. I have a SERVICE manual that covers most all of them.
I have a 1-43 that has OEM owners manual and it's a low hour saw with the OEM chain and bar. Hard to start coming out of storage if you don't know their recipe for a cold start. (for most all of them series)
Mark Heimannm in the above post is the resident expert on Mac's. He helped me get mine going as I got experience with them.
Thank You,Haven’t Got It To Run Yet ,Has A Spark Issue But Cylinder ,Gas Tank And Everything Is Super Clean,These Macs Are Different To Work On Than What I’m Used To But I’m Havin Fun Learning
 
Hello Okie, I recently acquired a 250 but don't know very much about it. I assume it is older than my 795, is that correct? Do you know what years the 250 was produced, and is there a way to tell the actual year my saw was made? If you have the manual in digital, that would be a great help. If so, could you post a link please, thanks :)
heimannm might know but when they were made is not very important. All are old.

If you are going to play/repair with the 1-40's - 250's and more you might check and see if chainsawr still has for sale the downloadable MAC SERVICE manual for those saws.
They had such priced very reasonable few years ago. I got such and then sent it too a DVD or CD disk (can use even if computer crashes) and when I'm working on a Mac I can just print the info I need. Several models of the Mac's and the Service sections are from the Mac service manuals.
chainsawr is also a good place to review and look at McCulloch parts, pieces, get parts numbers and then search and they sometimes list all the models that their part interchanges with.

You have to keep a heads up on some places like for example fleece bay that list the parts as VINTAGE and jack up the price.

You mention sanding the points. Sandpaper is not a good idea for points.
NEW Points and condenser is not easy to find for those models at a reasonable price. Heimannm might have some parts?
I keep a Nova or Atom chip around to sub for points just to see if I then get spark. Saves pulling the flywheel at first. I do not use the chip as a permanent fix.
Filing and re-adjusting really old worn out pitted points is usually just a temporary fix for me and most generally is not a good thing for me. Kinda like peeing into the wind.
 
heimannm might know but when they were made is not very important. All are old.

If you are going to play/repair with the 1-40's - 250's and more you might check and see if chainsawr still has for sale the downloadable MAC SERVICE manual for those saws.
They had such priced very reasonable few years ago. I got such and then sent it too a DVD or CD disk (can use even if computer crashes) and when I'm working on a Mac I can just print the info I need. Several models of the Mac's and the Service sections are from the Mac service manuals.
chainsawr is also a good place to review and look at McCulloch parts, pieces, get parts numbers and then search and they sometimes list all the models that their part interchanges with.

You have to keep a heads up on some places like for example fleece bay that list the parts as VINTAGE and jack up the price.

You mention sanding the points. Sandpaper is not a good idea for points.
NEW Points and condenser is not easy to find for those models at a reasonable price. Heimannm might have some parts?
I keep a Nova or Atom chip around to sub for points just to see if I then get spark. Saves pulling the flywheel at first. I do not use the chip as a permanent fix.
Filing and re-adjusting really old worn out pitted points is usually just a temporary fix for me and most generally is not a good thing for me. Kinda like peeing into the wind.
Thanks, I'll follow up with chainsawr :)
 
Test with the kill switch wire disconnected. Also look at the kill switch wire. Old insulation sometimes breaks off.
The NOVA chip I mentioned just replaces the points/condenser EXTERNALLY outside the flywheel.
The ATOM chip I mentioned are NLA as new. they were really good and color coded for their intended use. I tried using the NOVA chips in some of the old Mac and they were not reliable, sometimes out of time and might run good for day or two and all at once the saw chip fail. I just use them to sub for the points and condenser to see if I get a spark when I have no spark, not intended to get a run. The $20 type that can reverse the polarity is good for testing USUALLY.
 
Test with the kill switch wire disconnected. Also look at the kill switch wire. Old insulation sometimes breaks off.
The NOVA chip I mentioned just replaces the points/condenser EXTERNALLY outside the flywheel.
The ATOM chip I mentioned are NLA as new. they were really good and color coded for their intended use. I tried using the NOVA chips in some of the old Mac and they were not reliable, sometimes out of time and might run good for day or two and all at once the saw chip fail. I just use them to sub for the points and condenser to see if I get a spark when I have no spark, not intended to get a run. The $20 type that can reverse the polarity is good for testing USUALLY.
Thanks For Your Pointers ,I’ll Follow Your Advice ,Never Worked Much On Macs So It’s A Learning Curve For Me
 
Picked This Up Out Of An Old Garage ,Been Sitting For Years ,Anyone Know The Model Of This saw ,Any Thoughts On Model ,Good? Bad ? ,Not Real Familiar With These McCulloch,
Good luck with it, its really cool and it would and be neat to see it run again! I really like those old macs, wished we would have kept some of the ones that we used to have on the farm.

I still have 3 Mac PM 610 saws that are still going strong, take them out every so often to cut with. One of them my Dad bought new when I was a little kid in 1979 or 1980 and I started using it when I was 14 years old so .
 
Good luck with it, its really cool and it would and be neat to see it run again! I really like those old macs, wished we would have kept some of the ones that we used to have on the farm.

I still have 3 Mac PM 610 saws that are still going strong, take them out every so often to cut with. One of them my Dad bought new when I was a little kid in 1979 or 1980 and I started using it when I was 14 years old so .
Thank You,Yeah I Hope I Can Get It Running ,It Amazes Me At The Engineering Of These Old Macs,I Have A SP60,SP70 ,SP125 ,Super 6 And A MiniMac And Now This One,Oh And A Welder Also That My Son Picked Up For Me As A Gift
 
Thank You,Yeah I Hope I Can Get It Running ,It Amazes Me At The Engineering Of These Old Macs,I Have A SP60,SP70 ,SP125 ,Super 6 And A MiniMac And Now This One,Oh And A Welder Also That My Son Picked Up For Me As A Gift
McCulloch Welder???????????
Never heard of such??????


I had a McCulloch outboard motor once. I think maybe Mac sold their outboard motor design to someone else. I think it was the Mac yeller color, not sure. Big heavy dud like their saws.
 
McCulloch Welder???????????
Never heard of such??????


I had a McCulloch outboard motor once. I think maybe Mac sold their outboard motor design to someone else. I think it was the Mac yeller color, not sure. Big heavy dud like their saws.
Yeah It’s A Gasoline Powered Arc Welder Mculloch 170
 
Yeah It’s A Gasoline Powered Arc Welder Mculloch 170
Thanks for the comeback info.

I'm surprised I've never heard of such. I'm a electrician and electronics tech and repair welders/generators, electrically and mechanically and never ran across a Mac welder.

Lots of info on-line about your welder.

Post up a picture of the top of your carb on your 1-45 chainsaw so we might can ID which one it has.

Their is a learning curve on those different type carbs on those. Good thing to ask questions on here BEFORE even removing one of them carbs for repairs. I prefer the Tillotson carbs due to more user friendly for me to repair. The Mac service manual I mentioned has the 3 different types listed with repair tips.
 

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