High Quality Chainsaw Bars Husqvarna Toys Hockfire Saws

-Knock knock! -Who's there? Yep, you know it! MS650

popopboat

Super OPE Member
Local time
7:15 AM
User ID
10479
Joined
Sep 17, 2019
Messages
434
Reaction score
707
Location
Croatia
Country flag
* DANGER ! *f-wordWIT POWDERCOATING *

Made myself a powdercoating gun with a 3D printer and some telfon tape.
Was about to kill myself in process... couldnt get powder to stick *s-word, gave up and came back 3 times ... Then just like that i started sticking like glued.

Some flaws present, but overall i'm extremely satisfied with end result. (top hole was my grounding, thats why paint is missing)

121556127_960296141133697_8735021179835357800_n.jpg
121656993_380670486448339_8922476161810292528_n.jpg 121653309_646013306103526_4260612651729000301_n.jpg
 

pavel408

Super OPE Member
Local time
7:15 AM
User ID
9078
Joined
Mar 25, 2019
Messages
212
Reaction score
559
Location
EU
Country flag
Very nice result! How did you make the coating gun?
 

Ford3000

Super OPE Member
Local time
6:15 AM
User ID
7311
Joined
Sep 13, 2018
Messages
880
Reaction score
1,144
Location
.
Country flag
Were the cylinder studs loose when you took it apart,
looks like a well defined line at the base joint, would
have expected not to see the joint with dust oil and what
ever else settled in there.
 

popopboat

Super OPE Member
Local time
7:15 AM
User ID
10479
Joined
Sep 17, 2019
Messages
434
Reaction score
707
Location
Croatia
Country flag
Were the cylinder studs loose when you took it apart,
looks like a well defined line at the base joint, would
have expected not to see the joint with dust oil and what
ever else settled in there.

To be honest, i dont remember exactly about cylinder bolts, but i dont think they were loose. (atleast 3 of them definitely werent loose)
Bent 1 and broke 2 chinese bits while removing cylinder.

But 3 crankcase bolts were loose, cheap gasket failed and poor thing has been ingesting bar oil for who knows how long... someone tried "fixing" with some kind of silicone... didnt work, only destroyed paint and gave me headache as bar oil (mixed with gasoline, literally pitch black, like from an old diesel) leaked on my whole table and all my stuff on it.

Check the piston, probably 1mm thick carbon deposits on few spots..

122813327_833241444172408_6672649007596655024_n.jpg 122900989_2652049998390766_2017836632596088137_n.jpg
 

popopboat

Super OPE Member
Local time
7:15 AM
User ID
10479
Joined
Sep 17, 2019
Messages
434
Reaction score
707
Location
Croatia
Country flag
Should have posted this earlier, so here you go if someone is interested to see actual knock knock.
Really struggled with the quality, beacuse of bad lighting, still bad quality but you get the point.

 

popopboat

Super OPE Member
Local time
7:15 AM
User ID
10479
Joined
Sep 17, 2019
Messages
434
Reaction score
707
Location
Croatia
Country flag
Uh oh, this took more time to post than it should had, was too busy i suppose :D

This is pretty much it.

IMG_20201104_203426_1680x782.jpg IMG_20201104_204111_1400x1050.jpg

Cheap wall painter (motor identical to a vacuum cleaner) blows air through the hose and through the "flow control valve" which i 3d printed, adjusted by screwing the screw in and out.

IMG_20201104_204200_788x1050.jpg

Then through the hose into the glass jar, hose goes to the bottom of the jar, goes through the powder towards the top and carries some powder with it.

IMG_20201104_203638_1400x1050.jpg

Then powder goes through the "curvy" part, plumbing PTFE tape taped with doubler sided tape on the curvy parts.
Powder gets charged by rubbing on the PTFE, works better with low humidity, less charge escapes and powder sticks better.

IMG_20201104_204128_1400x1050.jpg

Tube is tapered so it fits and seals a bit better, and i can remove the parts unlike the last one which was straight all the way.

Probably most of you know this, just a short explanation.

This is the second attempt, bit better than the first one but still needs some adjustments.
 

popopboat

Super OPE Member
Local time
7:15 AM
User ID
10479
Joined
Sep 17, 2019
Messages
434
Reaction score
707
Location
Croatia
Country flag
Almost completely finished, still need to make some felling dogs, just need the right material, pretty satisfied with old saw blade that i already made for husky 359 and chineso.
And AV rubber caps yes.

IMG_20201104_211318_1680x782.jpg IMG_20201104_211208_1680x782.jpg
Spent too much time painting the letters black and then messed up, ofcourse.

Not too bad for 150$ id say.
 

popopboat

Super OPE Member
Local time
7:15 AM
User ID
10479
Joined
Sep 17, 2019
Messages
434
Reaction score
707
Location
Croatia
Country flag
I've been thinking for a while about doing a gasket removal.
Soldering wire says 0.6mm of squish, gasket is thick 0.5mm therefore 0.1 mm would be insufficient right ?
 

deye223

AIR FUEL SPARK VROOOOOM
Local time
3:15 PM
User ID
7358
Joined
Sep 18, 2018
Messages
1,126
Reaction score
4,318
Location
Australia
Country flag
.6mm is around 0.025" I would not be going much less than .5 of a mill that's about 0.020" so yes point one mil nowhere near enough
 

Wonkydonkey

Plastic member
Local time
6:15 AM
User ID
3189
Joined
May 14, 2017
Messages
5,300
Reaction score
24,031
Location
Sussex, UK.
Country flag
I'd leave it as it is, if your measurements are correct.
If you double check your measurements and find your wrong, then you can always make a thinner gasket out of a coke can or beer can, and yes they are different thicknesses
0.5mm is what is recommended
 

Vintage Engine Repairs

Pinnacle OPE Member
Local time
1:15 PM
User ID
10195
Joined
Aug 15, 2019
Messages
482
Reaction score
1,853
Location
australia

BuckthornBonnie

Pinnacle OPE Member
Local time
1:15 AM
User ID
1725
Joined
Aug 22, 2016
Messages
956
Reaction score
1,641
Location
Penn Yan, NY
Country flag
I’ve seen a couple cranks crack and eventually break off there. I’ve always been able to keep the clip on and run ‘em.
 

popopboat

Super OPE Member
Local time
7:15 AM
User ID
10479
Joined
Sep 17, 2019
Messages
434
Reaction score
707
Location
Croatia
Country flag
This is a really a low hour crank

I was thinking about tack weld it, but after all how much stress does that part stand... holds a clip.
Im just hoping that whole clutch part doesnt break off as ive seen on several treads.

Like what the *f-word stihl???
 
Last edited:

BuckthornBonnie

Pinnacle OPE Member
Local time
1:15 AM
User ID
1725
Joined
Aug 22, 2016
Messages
956
Reaction score
1,641
Location
Penn Yan, NY
Country flag
You’re probably fine. The clutch area break is typically a user error (clutch torque, running low rakers, general abuse) or a defect. I’ve only seen one crank break at the clutch threads and that was a high hour saw.

A different style snap ring or e-clip probably isn’t needed but could be used if that breaks off.
 

lehman live edge slab

Live Action
Local time
12:15 AM
User ID
3953
Joined
Sep 2, 2017
Messages
4,414
Reaction score
15,408
Location
Mn
Country flag
To be honest, i dont remember exactly about cylinder bolts, but i dont think they were loose. (atleast 3 of them definitely werent loose)
Bent 1 and broke 2 chinese bits while removing cylinder.

But 3 crankcase bolts were loose, cheap gasket failed and poor thing has been ingesting bar oil for who knows how long... someone tried "fixing" with some kind of silicone... didnt work, only destroyed paint and gave me headache as bar oil (mixed with gasoline, literally pitch black, like from an old diesel) leaked on my whole table and all my stuff on it.

Check the piston, probably 1mm thick carbon deposits on few spots..

View attachment 264354 View attachment 264355
Looking at this I’m wondering if this is a compounding problem that caused the rod bearing let go. Was burning bar oil because of failed gasket which caused carbon to build up to the point that it was a head slapper at times knocking the rod bearing out.
 
Top