The oiler is going to be the issue there. It has the power to pull it, but I just don’t see it oiling much more than 36” in hardwood. I don’t have any softwood that size but I would guess it would cut a 36 inch pine in about half the time. It may oil fine in softer woodThat 592 sure seems to hold RPM well. I want to see what happens when it has two more feet of bar on it, though. That was always where a 395 walked away from anything around its displacement. Not that it was surprising, it was the spiritual successor to the 2100, which was a special saw to run long bars on by its reputation across the west coast.
Yes both are portedi would think that the 395 would have an advantage just because it a bigger saw. are they both ported?
The oiler is going to be the issue there. It has the power to pull it, but I just don’t see it oiling much more than 36” in hardwood.
Saturday can't come soon enough.Yes both are ported
Werd!Saturday can't come soon enough.
Thank you for the input I’m gonna try the greaseThin smear of grease around the sealing edge, wont hurt anything and will immediately fix your problem.
Good point I’ve always said the same thing lotta extra weight for a 20 inch barThe guy does great work. But I just don't understand a 90cc saw running a 20" bar. We have guys here in USA running 20-24" bars on 50-60cc saws. Just me...
The oiler is going to be the issue there. It has the power to pull it, but I just don’t see it oiling much more than 36” in hardwood. I don’t have any softwood that size but I would guess it would cut a 36 inch pine in about half the time. It may oil fine in softer wood
I didn’t look, but I don’t believe so. 592 would be more similar to the 572Not sure if this us a dumb question or not, but can a 395 oiler be fitted to the 592?
I didn’t test that, but being a strato saw, the 592 should be considerably betterhow is the fuel usage 592 vs 395
That could be. And the bar oil that I’ve been using is plenty thick as well. But I would think after a couple of minutes of straight cutting that it would be thinned out. Maybe it’s still too thick. IdkThe 395 uses an outboard clutch, so the pump is driven off the end of the drum to a gear. The 592 has an inbord clutch so it's driven of a pinion that the outer radius of the drum, like most every inboard clutch saw.
So it's sounding like the oil output is a bit disappointing, I found the same with the 572, in dry Ash it would struggle to oil a 24" B&C. But than again maybe we just like seeing more oil than what's actually truly necessary.[emoji848]
I don't think so. I modded an asian 660 pump and that thing runs out of chain oil faster than fuel on that 660 gas pig. I suspect 372 can do this as well, the pump is sooo simple, just grind the slop steeper to gain more stroke .The 395 uses an outboard clutch, so the pump is driven off the end of the drum to a gear. The 592 has an inbord clutch so it's driven of a pinion that the outer radius of the drum, like most every inboard clutch saw.
So it's sounding like the oil output is a bit disappointing, I found the same with the 572, in dry Ash it would struggle to oil a 24" B&C. But than again maybe we just like seeing more oil than what's actually truly necessary.[emoji848]
I'm sure that would be totally possible, I did my 7900 the same way, increase the angle on the piston and you should be good to go.I don't think so. I modded an asian 660 pump and that thing runs out of chain oil faster than fuel on that 660 gas pig. I suspect 372 can do this as well, the pump is sooo simple, just grind the slop steeper to gain more stroke .
Yeah as soon as you get heat in it the oil always gets very thin.That could be. And the bar oil that I’ve been using is plenty thick as well. But I would think after a couple of minutes of straight cutting that it would be thinned out. Maybe it’s still too thick. Idk