346xp early model squish problems

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Wornkknobby3

Wornkknobby3

ArboristSite Lurker
Joined
Jun 12, 2019
Messages
29
Location
NH
So normally it’s arpund 18 thousandths from the factory? Well with no gasket that is?
I know once I crush the solder once the piston then moves up and down freely after the initial crushing of the solder.
 
Andyshine77
Joined
Jan 25, 2004
Messages
11,305
Location
Cincinnati, OH
I find harder solder with the thicker gauge doesn't fully collapse unless you pull the saw over real fast, but I don't like doing that. Yes often times less than .018" in fact my 346 has .017" of clearance and it runs awesome. That's getting a bit tight thought, but I've run saws a long time like that, have a ported 7900 with less squish. All depends on the saws displacement and design.
 
Wornkknobby3

Wornkknobby3

ArboristSite Lurker
Joined
Jun 12, 2019
Messages
29
Location
NH
Sounds good I’ll take a second measurement with a new piece of solder. So by having yours around .017 without a gasket do you run a thinner gasket than stock or just no gasket at all? As there are variable numbers I see as far as a “safe” .020-.016” squish allowance.
 
Wornkknobby3

Wornkknobby3

ArboristSite Lurker
Joined
Jun 12, 2019
Messages
29
Location
NH
So at that toalrance how many hours have you logged on? Just curious on longevity over stock form. This is my spare 346xp so I can at least test different scenarios out and not be put completely on a saw.
 
Wornkknobby3

Wornkknobby3

ArboristSite Lurker
Joined
Jun 12, 2019
Messages
29
Location
NH
I also am going to look for a different solder. The smallest reading I can get is .025”. I just tried it in all directions in the head and I can not make it anything thinner than that.
I can see in with a flashlight light that I’m right agains the cylinder wall when I have the solder in there.
 
Andyshine77
Joined
Jan 25, 2004
Messages
11,305
Location
Cincinnati, OH
Yeah the solder has to be right against the cylinder wall. You always want to go with the smallest reading.

Don't know exactly how many hours I have on my 346 but that it's a well used saw, which is rare for me because of how many I own and how little I cut these days, it's my go too saw. I don't see anything abnormal on the top of the piston the saw behaves flawlessly.
 
Wornkknobby3

Wornkknobby3

ArboristSite Lurker
Joined
Jun 12, 2019
Messages
29
Location
NH
Sounds good. Maybe I can try putting the solder inside and then pulling the cylinder off to measure to see if that will give me a more exact tighter reading. At the moment I just stick it through the plug hold against the cylinder and cycle it a few times.
It does cycle freely after the solder is crushed without they piston touching once I crush the solder to the .025”.
 
Wornkknobby3

Wornkknobby3

ArboristSite Lurker
Joined
Jun 12, 2019
Messages
29
Location
NH
So I finally have this saw all back together, originally put the new top end and deleted the base gasket, then found to have an air leak once running. Culprit was the smallest pin hole in the rubber boot imaginable. Could not even see it from the inside out.
Swapped it from a parts 357xp I had and all back together she runs mint. Compression with new top end and base gasket gone feels good, measured 150 hot just now. Fires on 1 pull warm and I’m very happy to have her back again. Running her alittle on the rich side for now to break it in.
Very glad to have such great info available on this site.
 

Latest posts

Top