I like Stihl, but they make the worse air filtration on their saws.
Or is it the amount of oil you run?Ironbark and no never bothered ever worrying about fines getting through as I've pulled down our saws over the years with couple thousand hrs on em with zero damage from fines must be the oil we run.
Betcha we are not the only blokes interested in Mr rogue60's answer to your question, lolOr is it the amount of oil you run?
25:1 mineral oil shock horror! lolOr is it the amount of oil you run?
That’s a great pic of you and your dad! I bet you felt like a little badass holding that 090 while cutting! Piston looks good what mix oil do you use down there? I am not trying to start an oil thread just curious.25:1 mineral oil shock horror! lol
As I said never seen damage from fines myself and none of our saws got babied. tap the filter out and hit with air occasionally but we got very high hrs out of em.
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That's me and dad late ish 70's yeah he loved his 090's. He was pissed when they stopped selling 090's in AU he reckons it was because Stihl wasn't making money selling new saws because the 090's go forever! lol
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Nothing fancy used this for couple decades never had an oil related problem/failure and a crap ton of fines don't seem to bother anything? even with high silica content timber. burns clean for the hrs no carboned up exhaust ports excellent ring seal throughout a saws life. Run it at 25:1 and tuned in 090 076 066 660 661 088 880 hard-working work saws over the years.That’s a great pic of you and your dad! I bet you felt like a little badass holding that 090 while cutting! Piston looks good what mix oil do you use down there? I am not trying to start an oil thread just curious.
Will a 500I tune itself at 25:1? I’ve been running Stihl grey bottle at about 45:1, .9 gallons to a 2.6oz bottle. May try a tank at 2 bottles.Nothing fancy used this for couple decades never had an oil related problem/failure and a crap ton of fines don't seem to bother anything? even with high silica content timber. burns clean for the hrs no carboned up exhaust ports excellent ring seal throughout a saws life. Run it at 25:1 and tuned in 090 076 066 660 661 088 880 hard-working work saws over the years.
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The video by Cotontop3 showed he placed the rubber washer under the factory foam washer, which would push the factory foam washer up tighter against the underside surface of the top of the filter, when locked in place. You placed your rubber washer on top of the filter rather than underneath it; I wonder if the washer location makes a difference in sealing ability?I had a bit yesterday evening while waiting for a customer to show up. 5 tanks of fuel since I put a rubber washer between the filter and half turn lock. It kept the stuff out from under the filter. Now just have way too many fines that I’m less worried about. I’m gonna silicone it down and order an aftermarket filter.
The first 500i's off the assembly line had a loose fitting air filter cover.
The fix was to double the foam washer that goes between the cover & the injector housing.
there is a vid on youtube on this.
I did it on mine & it worked perfectly.
Stihl was to have fixed that in later production runs. So my question is: When did you buy the saw?
My debris is coming in under the filter base. So adding a washer under the filter center stud would make that worse. I can tolerate the little coming in the center stud hole.The video by Cotontop3 showed he placed the rubber washer under the factory foam washer, which would push the factory foam washer up tighter against the underside surface of the top of the filter, when locked in place. You placed your rubber washer on top of the filter rather than underneath it; I wonder if the washer location makes a difference in sealing ability?
Bought January of 21.Or what is the Date Of Manufacture. I bought my 500i in Sept21, yet the DOM is May21.
Bought January of 21.
5.20DOM is on the sticker that is under the handle. AKA foot rest for starting. You should see the DOM just before displ: 79cc.
OK, so the dirt/fines was getting inside the injector housing from under the base of the filter, until you put the rubber washer above the filter top, causing a little more "down pressure" on the bottom of the filter... Makes sense... Except that I looked at my 500i's filter and it appears the lower surface of the filter is actually sealed to the injector housing by a two-lipped circumfrential rubber gasket seal, that seals agains the vertical edge of the cylinder portion of the injector housing. So a little more down pressure applied from the top of the filter, shouldn't affect the sealing properties of the circular seal, which is injection-molded into the hard plastic of the lower filter housing. That circular rubber seal on my filter is an interference fit, meaning the diameter of the hole in the seal is smaller than the outside of the vertical wall of the injector housing it slides over. It takes a bit of force to slide the filter down to where it is pressed against the flat portion of the injector house.So adding a washer under the filter center stud would make that worse
Find any fines in the throat when you opened it up?OK, so the dirt/fines was getting inside the injector housing from under the base of the filter, until you put the rubber washer above the filter top, causing a little more "down pressure" on the bottom of the filter... Makes sense... Except that I looked at my 500i's filter and it appears the lower surface of the filter is actually sealed to the injector housing by a two-lipped circumfrential rubber gasket seal, that seals agains the vertical edge of the cylinder portion of the injector housing. So a little more down pressure applied from the top of the filter, shouldn't affect the sealing properties of the circular seal, which is injection-molded into the hard plastic of the lower filter housing. That circular rubber seal on my filter is an interference fit, meaning the diameter of the hole in the seal is smaller than the outside of the vertical wall of the injector housing it slides over. It takes a bit of force to slide the filter down to where it is pressed against the flat portion of the injector house.
If you had fines and dirt getting past that lower seal, then maybe the filter is/was defective. Maybe the rubber seal got hard over time, dried out from heat and just isn't doing the job it is supposed to be doing. Certainly applying a little of the recommended vacuum grease to the sealing surfaces would help it to slide home a little easier and reduce the chance of wear in the surface.
I've included pictures of the filter showing the injection molded rubber seal with the two edges, a picture of a straight edge atop the bottom of the filter showing light leaking past the molded seal and the hard plastic base of the filter housing. Last picture shows a dent in the shape of a ring in the foam washer on the stud which is supposed to seal that area under the filter top. I couldn't tell by looking at the picture you posted of the same foam washer atop the stud, that it was being compressed properly. At least I couldn't see a defined, crisp mark like on mine.
When I twist the locking nut on the stud, I can see the plastic cover bends in a little as the knob is rotated, and then springs back out when the nut goes over center.
For sure the Max Flow after market filter looks like it will solve the problem if the stock one can't.
No, but my saw is brand new and hasn't been used to cut anything, so no field experience to report on.Find any fines in the throat when you opened it up?
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