Sam R
8mm Socket
Stated complaint: Customer brought in non-running saw, stated it ran fine until it died mid cut. Would not restart. Customer claims it is a carburetor issue.
Initial visual exam and test run: Unit looks to be clean, well cared for. Engine pulls over fine; piston is not frozen, compression feels a bit low. Will not start following correct starting procedure, also won't start w/ WOT.
Diagnosis: Following Stihl engine check sheet the full diagnosis reveals a few interesting facts about the unit:
Conclusion: The saw is toast; the cost to repair the unit borders on $400 making repair economically unwise.
Initial visual exam and test run: Unit looks to be clean, well cared for. Engine pulls over fine; piston is not frozen, compression feels a bit low. Will not start following correct starting procedure, also won't start w/ WOT.
Diagnosis: Following Stihl engine check sheet the full diagnosis reveals a few interesting facts about the unit:
- The saw has approximately 110 lb of compression
- The intake side of the p&c are scored across the skirt
- Rings are free, exhaust side looks okay
- Unit fails vacuum (negative pressure) test, but passes positive vacuum test except:
- Bad bearings in unit mean lateral play in crankshaft is possible & will release all held pressure
- Which means the seals (primarily on clutch side) are bad
- Intact limiter caps on Carburetor rules out tampering; carburetor throttle shaft okay, carb passes positive pressure test; unit failure conditions not in line w/ bad carburetor
Conclusion: The saw is toast; the cost to repair the unit borders on $400 making repair economically unwise.