Hey all,
Found a Stihl 029 super in a junkyard. Fixed a broken fuel line, replaced the missing carb, and discovered the engine had low compression so I decided to replace the motor with the 390 big bore engine. I just finished my rebuild today. Started the saw, it sound pretty rough, figure it just needs tuning. after a little while with no improvement there was a very audible clunk and the saw stopped. I thought it was a bad motor until I took the flywheel off and discovered a broken key. I did manage to get the engine to turn a little without the flywheel through some miracle, and from the exhaust, intake, and spark port everything looks good, no scratches or broken rings. I'm pretty sure it has compression too because the impulse line was suctioned hard to the carb when I tried to take it off and check the crank bottom (piston stop in the down stroke position initially). I think I may have caused the flywheel to break when I re assembled the saw. I broke the ground screw off in the motor when I was reassembling (goof I know) and couldn't get it out so I drilled into it and replaced it with an M6 sheet metal screw that pokes a little above the shroud for the ground screw. The screw has no marks on it though. Thoughts? This is my first time doing any kind of mechanical engine work and failing this hard has me really bummed.
Found a Stihl 029 super in a junkyard. Fixed a broken fuel line, replaced the missing carb, and discovered the engine had low compression so I decided to replace the motor with the 390 big bore engine. I just finished my rebuild today. Started the saw, it sound pretty rough, figure it just needs tuning. after a little while with no improvement there was a very audible clunk and the saw stopped. I thought it was a bad motor until I took the flywheel off and discovered a broken key. I did manage to get the engine to turn a little without the flywheel through some miracle, and from the exhaust, intake, and spark port everything looks good, no scratches or broken rings. I'm pretty sure it has compression too because the impulse line was suctioned hard to the carb when I tried to take it off and check the crank bottom (piston stop in the down stroke position initially). I think I may have caused the flywheel to break when I re assembled the saw. I broke the ground screw off in the motor when I was reassembling (goof I know) and couldn't get it out so I drilled into it and replaced it with an M6 sheet metal screw that pokes a little above the shroud for the ground screw. The screw has no marks on it though. Thoughts? This is my first time doing any kind of mechanical engine work and failing this hard has me really bummed.