I've only used stihl 7tooth until now. Though I had planned to try a china 8 tooth today.
I measured the distance from the inside to outside on the stihl rim sprockets just now and it was exactly 6mm on every tooth. They don't appear to be out of center visually or by measure.
Yes, using a new 8 tooth rim sprocket every rev the chain drops 1/8 off the bar for a single tooth worth of revolution and then comes back to snug immediately for the next 7. I don't have any new 7 tooth rim sprockets to test with, only worn ones, but it was similar with a warn one.
I loosely pushed the rim sprocket out towards the washer before running the test. If I really force it I can get the intermittent sag down to possibly 1/16th instead of 1/8th, but that's not 0.
My thought this morning was that it was the wrong washer since I saw some thinner looking ones on youtube and ebay but it appears to be correct when looking up the OEM part images. My washer is on the right. It's flat against a straight edge. The rim sprocket on the left has around 3-6 tanks of gas on it. I have no idea if that's typical wear for such little use, but I doubt it.
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I did buy the saw new, no one else has ever used it. In fact, I've barely used it and I think I've had this issue since day one.
I'm going to head to the dealership today and grab a new bearing, drum, washer and see if they have a spur socket I could try. The only remaining thing that seems likely is the chain pulling the drum and leaning the sprocket. The STIHL rim sprockets do seem to have a lot of play (easily able to create an oval trajectory) but that should self-correct I would think. I carefully measured the drum spine but it was perfect.
I've bent a crank before and broken another on some mowers back when I had a lawn business years ago. That takes an extraordinary amount of force and the saw hasn't been exposed to anything even remotely like that so I don't know how that would have happened. I rotated the drum a lot by hand watching the gap between the plastic and drum and it never changed. I would think that gap would get bigger and smaller if it was a bent crank.
Thanks again for all the help!