Thanks Chris
I also wondered if the rubber covered bearings allow the crank to move, especially since I'm reducing the squish and the clearance to the crankshaft counterweights. I don't really think it moves too much though, as the durometer of that rubber is pretty high and it's compressed quite a bit. It probably does damp out really high frequency movement some.Looking at those "rubber" bedded bearings and wondering how much of a dynamic squish band is in play here also.
First thought of this as a bit of flippant self mussing and then said to self, hmm tis likely far truer than you'd expect.
Yeah, I've seen that done. I should look at the cut away engine and see how that might interact with the other things I've done here. The transfers actually extend down pretty far below the piston at BDC, all the way to the bearing.Only thing I could think of looking at pics on first page. Possibly slot the skirt where transfer ports are located to help open up more passage way for air fuel mix to get to the transfer ports. Not sure if it would make a difference but my mind was wandering
I ended up with 0.021". It probably could have been less but given all the hand grinding and the rubber covered bearings I was good with that.What did you end up with for squish or what would you recommend it should be?
My Poulan 2775 does this too.I have a 266 poulan pro like the one above I use it for liming after I drop my firewood. I have a question though she kicks back like a mule !`If you don't hang onto the recoil handle tight it will rip the handle through your fingers , hurts like,... well you know. So the timing is off I assume? if I want to fix this which way do I adjust the flywheel? Like if the magnets are lined up with the coil pick up which way would you adjust the flywheel? I really don't know how to ask this intelligently ha ha.
Cool! I'm glad to see others try it. I know of a couple of others who have ground out the bearing pockets on these through various methods, and they run pretty well.Hi everyone this is the first time I have put anything on here. I been a long time mechanic on all sorts of different equipment and been into various hi performance hobbies especially tractor pulling so needless to say im never happy leaveing anything I own stock lol and I always enjoy building up something others say is junk into something impressive. I cut wood to heat my garage and I began with a poulan 2900 someone gave me that didnt run that I resurrected. That one poulan turned into a dozen and a few huskeys. I been doing muffler mods and simple improvements that really helped these saws. Raiseing the compression has been in the back of my mind for some time and last night I ran across this thread and what chris did is just what I had been thinking about so reading this gave me the confidence to try it. I took a 42cc craftsman measured the squish at 35 tho I surfaced the jug with a belt sander intended for wood I took it down 40 tho then deepend the bearing journals how chris did and turned the outer portion of the piston down 20 tho to make a dome. I started with 115 psi comp and now have 130 I also ported the exhaust port. Made a test cut tonight and wow what a difference. I now need to grind up an aggressive chain and see what it will really do. Sorry for the long post just wanted to introduce myself and thank everyone here for shareing the great info here and I wanted to share my findings also its good to know others are thinking outside the box like I like to do lol
While I was using this saw today it started acting erratically, revving at idle and all over the place. That turned out to be a loose carb mount block, but while looking for that I happened to notice what looked like arcing marks on the flywheel magnets. I though that was rather odd! So I looked into that further, and polished them off with some Scotchbrite - it was certainly from arcing.
First I figured maybe the coil/module was bad, so I pulled it off. While cleaning it up to put the replacement module in, I realized the metal strap that connects the ignition core lamination to the engine was missing - I had forgotten to put it back when I assembled it last! So in order to fire the plug it had to arc back to the coil lamination in addition to arcing across the plug gap. I'm sure that just did wonderful things to the bearings!
The flywheel is of course connected to the moving portions of the engine, and the plug is connected to the stationary cylinder, so electrical connection needed to be made between the crank/rod/piston assembly and the cylinder. Because the main crank bearings are rubber coated there isn't much connection there. Maybe it arced through the ball bearings and that rubber coating, but more likely it passed through the roller bearings from the crank to the rod to the piston, and then through the ring or piston to the cylinder wall. Anyway, I have no doubt some pitting went on along that path, and I'm not very happy about it - but I didn't put a lot of hours on it since the last rebuild and I'm not pulling it apart now. It's running great.
I am still amazed it ran like that, although I wish it hadn't.
I normally do not remove that strap but I had put helicoil inserts into the plastic case for the ignition screws as well as the recoil, since the threads were starting to strip out. I suspect that may have been when I forgot it.yeah, that little grounding strap is easy to miss. you could run a wire from the metal top end to a module mounting screw, like a stihl 029. it's easy to imagine that strap getting lost while you're de-crustifying a dirty saw. and getting it back in is 3-d tetris. i always figured that it wouldn't fire without that strap, amazing. will you need to replace the flywheel or module?
It seems to run fine. I decided to make it work:Report back to tell us if it runs different.
7
Enter your email address to join: