colvin
Active OPE Member
- Local time
- 7:46 PM
- User ID
- 15621
- Joined
- Feb 3, 2021
- Messages
- 6
- Reaction score
- 10
- Location
- Asheville, NC, USA
First of all, hats off to Huztl/Farmertec for making it possible for me to get started wrenching and modding saws as a hobby without breaking the bank. Love or hate them, without them I would still be dreaming of working on saws instead of actually doing it. I put together a 660 kit in January 2021, and that was the first time I've ever been inside of a saw. I should give considerable credit to Matthew Olson, whose YouTube videos showed me the way.
The 660 kit pretty much slapped right together, but not quite so much with the 440. The fit and finish on the 440 is much rougher. I've made it work for the most part and the problem-solving aspect was a lot of the fun. I even did some grinding on the cylinder to clean it up after watching the porting series videos from Tinman on YouTube. It went really well.
Some notes:
- The oil pump worm gear is utter garbage (more on this later)
- Squish without base gasket was .035 for both the 50mm and a big-bore 52mm top end
- Flywheel fit on crank shaft wasn't great
- Woodruff key was a super tight fit in the slot, required a lot of coercion
- The coil in the spark plug boot is too tight and rips off of the wire every time the spark plug is removed
- The decompression valve is considerably better quality than the one in the 660 kit
- Included 50mm cylinder had lots of flashing and barely any port chamfering
- ... more, but I can't think of them right now
Port timing using the Farmertec 52mm big bore (include a grain of salt, since this is my first time timing an engine):
- Exhaust opens at 100° ATDC, 160° duration
- Intake opens at 110° ABDC, 140° duration
- Transfers open at 120° ATDC, 20° blowdown
Now to my main issue.
The oil pump worm gear was complete garbage. Out of the box the spring was too long to even fit in the case. I was able to bend the kink at the end of the spring inwards just enough to get it into the case. It runs along a groove cut into the case, and required a bit more bending to get it to seat correctly into that groove. Once the clutch drum was installed, however, it would barely engage the slot in the drum.
The biggest issue was that the worm gear would not rotate independently of the crank shaft. Once the clutch was installed, it seems like it would bind with the worm gear -- the clutch bears on the washer, the washer bears on the bearing spacer/bushing and the top of the worm gear. The worm gear rotates with the crank shaft even at idle, and the load is transferred through the spring to the clutch drum. The end result was that the clutch drum rotated at idle, and when the chain brake was tested the worm gear disintegrated. The spring's coil around the gear bent and the spring popped off (luckily wedging in the case in such a way that it didn't destroy anything) and the bottom of the worm gear's threads sheared.
I finally managed to find an OEM worm gear and spring online (getting OEM Stihl parts is difficult where I'm at), but I'm concerned about the general fitment. Is the bearing spacer / bushing supposed to rotate with the crank, or is it supposed to remain stationary? I would think the former. Is the worm gear supposed to rotate around the bushing? I would think yes. Is the washer beneath the clutch supposed to bear down directly on the bushing and not on the top of the worm gear? It doesn't make sense to me that it bears down on the worm gear.
I'm not sure how an MS440 normally works.
Also, there is a part that looks like an oblong washer bent into a potato-chip kind of shape. I have no idea where that goes. I can try to upload a picture later.
The 660 kit pretty much slapped right together, but not quite so much with the 440. The fit and finish on the 440 is much rougher. I've made it work for the most part and the problem-solving aspect was a lot of the fun. I even did some grinding on the cylinder to clean it up after watching the porting series videos from Tinman on YouTube. It went really well.
Some notes:
- The oil pump worm gear is utter garbage (more on this later)
- Squish without base gasket was .035 for both the 50mm and a big-bore 52mm top end
- Flywheel fit on crank shaft wasn't great
- Woodruff key was a super tight fit in the slot, required a lot of coercion
- The coil in the spark plug boot is too tight and rips off of the wire every time the spark plug is removed
- The decompression valve is considerably better quality than the one in the 660 kit
- Included 50mm cylinder had lots of flashing and barely any port chamfering
- ... more, but I can't think of them right now
Port timing using the Farmertec 52mm big bore (include a grain of salt, since this is my first time timing an engine):
- Exhaust opens at 100° ATDC, 160° duration
- Intake opens at 110° ABDC, 140° duration
- Transfers open at 120° ATDC, 20° blowdown
Now to my main issue.
The oil pump worm gear was complete garbage. Out of the box the spring was too long to even fit in the case. I was able to bend the kink at the end of the spring inwards just enough to get it into the case. It runs along a groove cut into the case, and required a bit more bending to get it to seat correctly into that groove. Once the clutch drum was installed, however, it would barely engage the slot in the drum.
The biggest issue was that the worm gear would not rotate independently of the crank shaft. Once the clutch was installed, it seems like it would bind with the worm gear -- the clutch bears on the washer, the washer bears on the bearing spacer/bushing and the top of the worm gear. The worm gear rotates with the crank shaft even at idle, and the load is transferred through the spring to the clutch drum. The end result was that the clutch drum rotated at idle, and when the chain brake was tested the worm gear disintegrated. The spring's coil around the gear bent and the spring popped off (luckily wedging in the case in such a way that it didn't destroy anything) and the bottom of the worm gear's threads sheared.
I finally managed to find an OEM worm gear and spring online (getting OEM Stihl parts is difficult where I'm at), but I'm concerned about the general fitment. Is the bearing spacer / bushing supposed to rotate with the crank, or is it supposed to remain stationary? I would think the former. Is the worm gear supposed to rotate around the bushing? I would think yes. Is the washer beneath the clutch supposed to bear down directly on the bushing and not on the top of the worm gear? It doesn't make sense to me that it bears down on the worm gear.
I'm not sure how an MS440 normally works.
Also, there is a part that looks like an oblong washer bent into a potato-chip kind of shape. I have no idea where that goes. I can try to upload a picture later.