chilipeppermaniac
Ambassador of Decibels
Well fellas. New Chainsaw Day, Ol Chili never let's his chores, repairs, learning of new Ins and Outs of important equipment, tools, machinery, electronics etc let moss grow under his feet.
Anyway, a few of you know I got a new used Echo CS3000 top handle limbing saw at a pawn shop a few months back. Knowing what I know now, I overpaid by a little on it. ( it had an improper bar, the wrong bolts to hold the clutch cover and bar on, No chain adjuster, and even a thread-like string wrapped around the sprocket I didn't see when I bought it. ) I have since removed the string, bought proper bolts, bought chain tensioner parts and 5 new 14 inch Echo bars( great price) So, as soon as my 14 inch chain gets here, that saw should be ready to cut.
Now for the reason I started this thread. TODAY I went to examine another saw. I already own one of these same Stihl 026's. Since mine is not running, I needed a running saw. So, I was high bidder on ebay for one I could drive to see and either decline the saw or talk the seller down some. I removed the muffler, examined the piston, showed the seller the light score marks on it and then put it back together. As we prepared to test start and run it some, I said. I was thinking, I could go 2 ways on the situation. Since it was less compression than the saw I already own, and he saw the scoring marks, I was hesitant to buy it for the full bid price. I told him I could either pass on it, or ask if he'd take less. He asked how much less, so I shot him a number which he said ok to.
SO, I now own a PAIR of wonderful Stihl 026 saws,,,,,,, OH and in case anyone cares, I am contemplating pulling the cylinder off the running saw to see how minimal or extensive the damage is, then proceeding from there. If the cylinder is salvageable, I will simply buy a new piston, rings, wrist pin, roller bearing and proceed. If I need a cylinder, that is nothing but a few more bucks and same reassembly procedure.\
To be Cont. Thanks
Anyway, a few of you know I got a new used Echo CS3000 top handle limbing saw at a pawn shop a few months back. Knowing what I know now, I overpaid by a little on it. ( it had an improper bar, the wrong bolts to hold the clutch cover and bar on, No chain adjuster, and even a thread-like string wrapped around the sprocket I didn't see when I bought it. ) I have since removed the string, bought proper bolts, bought chain tensioner parts and 5 new 14 inch Echo bars( great price) So, as soon as my 14 inch chain gets here, that saw should be ready to cut.
Now for the reason I started this thread. TODAY I went to examine another saw. I already own one of these same Stihl 026's. Since mine is not running, I needed a running saw. So, I was high bidder on ebay for one I could drive to see and either decline the saw or talk the seller down some. I removed the muffler, examined the piston, showed the seller the light score marks on it and then put it back together. As we prepared to test start and run it some, I said. I was thinking, I could go 2 ways on the situation. Since it was less compression than the saw I already own, and he saw the scoring marks, I was hesitant to buy it for the full bid price. I told him I could either pass on it, or ask if he'd take less. He asked how much less, so I shot him a number which he said ok to.
SO, I now own a PAIR of wonderful Stihl 026 saws,,,,,,, OH and in case anyone cares, I am contemplating pulling the cylinder off the running saw to see how minimal or extensive the damage is, then proceeding from there. If the cylinder is salvageable, I will simply buy a new piston, rings, wrist pin, roller bearing and proceed. If I need a cylinder, that is nothing but a few more bucks and same reassembly procedure.\
To be Cont. Thanks
Last edited:





