Seized up stihl ms290

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a. palmer jr.
Joined
Apr 8, 2007
Messages
15,254
Location
Southern Indiana
It's a possibility you could have an air leak, assuming the correct air/fuel ratio and had the proper amount of oil in the fuel mix. Other things could be a crack in the intake boot or the pulse hose. You have to be careful when you put the engine together so you don't have a leak between the engine pan and the cylinder. Use good quality sealer on them and not rtv.
 
Full Chisel

Full Chisel

Slingin' Stihls and runnin' Huskies
Joined
Oct 12, 2014
Messages
1,927
Location
In the Timber
Well this thread has been a hoot to read. Definitely separated the knowledgeable posters from the wannabe armchair mechanics.

It amazes me how often the diagnosis is "lean seize" on here. Even after a piston pic of a pristine exhaust side!

The saw probably hydrolocked. Turning the nut on the flywheel freed it up. That would be my best guess from 1000 miles away...run it like you stole it, kill it and buy a better saw.
 
HarleyT
Joined
Dec 6, 2014
Messages
21,251
Well this thread has been a hoot to read. Definitely separated the knowledgeable posters from the wannabe armchair mechanics.

It amazes me how often the diagnosis is "lean seize" on here. Even after a piston pic of a pristine exhaust side!

The saw probably hydrolocked. Turning the nut on the flywheel freed it up. That would be my best guess from 1000 miles away...run it like you stole it, kill it and buy a better saw.
No, it is from a new poster inserting a new question/problem on an "old" thread instead of starting a new one.
 

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