The compression on the 3400 and 3800 are typically 120 to 130 psi. I have a relatively unused 3800 that is around 135 psi.
I think the squish on most of that series is over 0.040"
I think the squish on most of that series is over 0.040"
Do you remember what grit was used when the Briggs were honed back then?
I’ll never know if it’s got oil blow by, being a 2 stroke, lol. Sound like the old Vega engine song & dance. I’ve never honed aluminum before, plenty of cast iron bores, and this bore is really soft. Hence the original question.
It had two score marks above the right transfer from running w/o an air filter & sucking something up, I’d guess. The intake & carb was filthy with no air filter. I’ve lightly polished out the high spots on the score sides with a wood dowel & 320 Emory, & now it looks great.
BUT it needs a final polish, by comparing it to the existing good area of the cylinder, as otherwise it is glass smooth.
I’m trying a manual polish with Emory cloth this evening, before ever using the cork mixed 500 Sunnen stones at light pressure. I won’t have the stones for a week anyway. It may not help it any, but I plan to use this one & not sell it. Sunnen claims the 500 bars removed no material & only polishes, using light pressure.
The chromed piston looks brand new after decarboning. The rings had worn down into the two scores over time, and they are the pinned type rings. The seller even said it ran great with 130# compression, which it did have. Could not see a thing wrong from a muffler off front pic!
Do you remember what grit was used when the Briggs were honed back then?
I’ll never know if it’s got oil blow by, being a 2 stroke, lol. Sound like the old Vega engine song & dance. I’ve never honed aluminum before, plenty of cast iron bores, and this bore is really soft. Hence the original question.
It had two score marks above the right transfer from running w/o an air filter & sucking something up, I’d guess. The intake & carb was filthy with no air filter. I’ve lightly polished out the high spots on the score sides with a wood dowel & 320 Emory, & now it looks great.
BUT it needs a final polish, by comparing it to the existing good area of the cylinder, as otherwise it is glass smooth.
I’m trying a manual polish with Emory cloth this evening, before ever using the cork mixed 500 Sunnen stones at light pressure. I won’t have the stones for a week anyway. It may not help it any, but I plan to use this one & not sell it. Sunnen claims the 500 bars removed no material & only polishes, using light pressure.
The chromed piston looks brand new after decarboning. The rings had worn down into the two scores over time, and they are the pinned type rings. The seller even said it ran great with 130# compression, which it did have. Could not see a thing wrong from a muffler off front pic!
No sorry, that was so many years ago, I don't remember. I think leaving things alone is best, polishing out scores and such takes the cyl out of round in spots which is not good for 360 deg ring seal. The rings will do the final polish of that cyl.
Its yours though and you can do what you want with it.
That may be the best clutch cover decal I've seen since they were on the store shelves!
If it is as good as it looks can you get a few high definition photo's of it?
Maybe we can have some printed up.
Mike
The chain being on backwards was the first thing that caught my eye. [emoji3]I was looking at the poulan boxes with the green and yellow saws on the box pic yesterday. All the chains were right way. Never would have paid attention to that before.
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