McCulloch Chain Saws

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
I got the oilers working on the 1-70 & the 1-75.Some clown on FB told me that I had to take the tank handle off in order to fix 'em,not true.I had to take the 4 bolts out that hold the tank on & the 2 bottom bolts for the front handle.First I did a practice run on the seized 1-70 so I knew what I'd be expecting on the other saws.Boy,that seized 1-70 must've been left outside for quite a while,that plunger piston was seized in there pretty good,but I got it freed up.I don't know if that piston is any good - rust all around it.
Then I moved on to the good 1-70.I pulled the tank off that saw & that plunger piston was seized too.I used some WD40 & tapped it down & it broke free.I put it back together & it oils great.
Next was the 1-75,this was the easiest fix I ever had.Something told me to try it before I tore it apart,I did & it started working just fine.I tried that oiler several times & it was stuck.That time it broke free & started oiling just fine.
Now the only thing left is to pull the carb off the 1-70 & rebuild it.It's got a Tilly HL19D.
 
Interesting! A D44 with a left hand starter?

Sent from my SM-N970U using Tapatalk
I think they just took what ever left over parts they could find and sort of piled them together to resemble a saw. That flywheel housing will not bolt up with the Super Series chassis.

Mark
 
Ran across this vid this morning from Mac 131 regarding servicing the duckbills on the more stubborn Mac fuel caps that used the molded aluminum inserts for the vents. Definitely worth a look and a thumbs up. He's evidently restricting access and you'll need to use the 'Watch on YouTube' link to watch.



Anyone know what happened to this guy? His channel doesn't seem to exist anymore.
Did he just grow tired of it or was his channel zapped?
 
I hope he landed on his feet somewhere. Seemed like a sincere and humble guy just wanting to share what he was learning while cultivating his channel with some good will along the way.

Would be a shame if he fell victim to the lurker a-holes and haters out there just looking for a party to crash.
 
Kind of have a general chainsaw question but I like hanging out with you guys plus it's going on a Mac lol.
I just ordered an Oregon power match 36 inch bar in large Husky mount for my 550. The bar had a .404 tip but the tail is stamped 115DL .375 .063. My math tells me I need 107DL of .404, does that sound right before I order a chain?

Sent from my SM-G981U using Tapatalk
 
Also, is anyone else having problems loading pictures using Tapatalk? It's getting annoying having to switch to web view to see pictures.

Sent from my SM-G981U using Tapatalk
 
Also, is anyone else having problems loading pictures using Tapatalk? It's getting annoying having to switch to web view to see pictures.

Sent from my SM-G981U using Tapatalk
Fixed it, I just had to log out and back in lol, sometimes it's the stupidest things [emoji28]

Sent from my SM-G981U using Tapatalk
 
Kevin - I have some notes telling me McCulloch & Sugihara bars use 108 with a new chain and 107 once they are stretched a bit. You might get by with 107 but have to put everything together off the saw and slide it on with the chain engaged in the bar and sprockets, there may not be enough slack to walk the DL's over the nose of the bar with the clutch and bar installed.

Mark
 
Any one got some ideas on air filters for the 10-10A. I think the original filters suck at keeping out the fines. Has any body tried putting a foam over the flocking crap? Any ideas? Would they possibly fit?
 
Any one got some ideas on air filters for the 10-10A. I think the original filters suck at keeping out the fines. Has any body tried putting a foam over the flocking crap? Any ideas? Would they possibly fit?
I bought a sheet of uni-filter material and sowed it on the filter element (frocking was gone) with fishing line. Sort of a DYI Max flow filter. It works well, and is actually intended for that purpose.
 
Back
Top