Before:



After:




I stripped it down far enough that I could pressure test the crankcase and observe the oil seals as I sprayed them with soapy water. All good. I replaced oil, fuel, and impulse hoses, fuel filter, and a plastic guard on the inside of the sprocket cover. I ultrasonically cleaned and rebuit the carb and repaired broken kill-switch wires. I cleaned and repainted the guide bar and spent way too long freeing up rusty links in the chain. The most time, however, was spent removing 25 years of accumulated caked-on oily sawdust throughout the saw.
Bottom line: it runs, idles, and cuts!! However, it's running a 20 inch bar and weighs 3 lb more than my other 20 inch Stihls. But I'm happy as a lark to add another running vintage Stihl to my herd! Thanks for watching! O



After:




I stripped it down far enough that I could pressure test the crankcase and observe the oil seals as I sprayed them with soapy water. All good. I replaced oil, fuel, and impulse hoses, fuel filter, and a plastic guard on the inside of the sprocket cover. I ultrasonically cleaned and rebuit the carb and repaired broken kill-switch wires. I cleaned and repainted the guide bar and spent way too long freeing up rusty links in the chain. The most time, however, was spent removing 25 years of accumulated caked-on oily sawdust throughout the saw.
Bottom line: it runs, idles, and cuts!! However, it's running a 20 inch bar and weighs 3 lb more than my other 20 inch Stihls. But I'm happy as a lark to add another running vintage Stihl to my herd! Thanks for watching! O