Fish
Pinnacle OPE Member
- Local time
- 5:04 PM
- User ID
- 587
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2016
- Messages
- 808
- Reaction score
- 1,260
- Location
- Manton Ky.
No, it is not that hard to get at.
I agree, it is not the impulse line.
I agree, it is not the impulse line.
Wait a minute, Fish, I thought we concluded that the problem is the impulse line (blocked, cracked, etc.). There appears to be no air movement through it at all. Doesn't the carb wait for a signal from the impulse line before it squirts fuel into the combustion chamber? If it gets no signal, then the fuel does not flow.No, it is not that hard to get at. I agree, it is not the impulse line.
it drives the fuel pump gasket at the bottom of the carb which pumps the fuel and also drives the diaphragm. You are correct.I may need to be corrected here, but, I believe the impulse drives the diaphragm, which pumps the fuel into place to be then pulled in by a Venturi when air flows through the carb.
I fix boilers for $, saws are a hobby.
With spark plug removed, I covered the impulse hole with a dab of Moly grease and blocked the manifold with my thumb. Several fast pulls produced nothing. I repeated with the spark plug inserted. Again nothing. The grease blob stares at me like a dead mouse. There is no feedback signal getting to the carb diaphragm. That would explain why no fuel mixture is making it to the combustion chamber.Just to double check, put a dab of grease over the impulse hole. If it sucks in or spits out the grease the hose is probably fine. You were getting Some fuel at one time....so that more than likely means the hose is cracked not broken. You don't need the plug in the cylinder to check impulse. These small saws don't produce a whole lot so give it a few fast pulls.
But like said, if the hose has a small crack it more than likely will show some small signs of impulse.
So......Vac/pressure test performed?
I did that, Fear. The impulse line looks good. No cracks anywhere. I haven't blown out the hose yet with high pressure, but that seems like a fruitless exercise. Replacing the impulse hose on an 025 is impossible unless the cylinder is also removed. So all of my fears of completely disassembling the engine to replace the impulse hose are justified.Well, if you pull the handle, you can get at the impulse line. It may be off the cylinder. Sounds like you're bracketing the target.
So I'm confused...you said the saw was running and just stopped. Said to determined it was getting fuel because of a wet plug. I don't see a leaking crank seal stopping a saw dead in its tracks during a cut. Unless it just completely shredded.So, I think we are back to a blown engine with air leaks that prevent any operation of the impulse hose. Fish may have been right. The crankshaft seals are likely gone and those leaks allow air in so that nothing makes it to the impulse hose. Seem reasonable?
Exactly my thoughts. Flywheel wonky.The025/MS250 had 2 different ignitions, you have to make sure that you have the correct flywheel.
Best. Answer.A 20min pressure/vac test would answer a lot of questions.




