lefty wrote:Thank you.
Any opinion on what an acceptable compression should be on this saw? I'm showing 113 psi. The saw is used by a homeowner to chop firewood.
113 PSI is about bare minimum rock bottom number for most any modern 2-stroke. If it has gone far enough that seals are hardening (which is usually why they leak) it has probably experienced extended high heat. I'd probably suggest a new saw for that customer, but if you sell labor on the cheap , might get away with low cost aftermarket parts, but either way likely would need a full tear-down and rebuild, new jug & piston, new seals, full gasket set, plus all the normal maintenance items, and a good cleaning, might serve another 3-5 years depending on maintenance. But for a pro shop - rebuild cost would exceed buying new saw. Of course, could just try and fix the seals (possible to replace them without splitting the crankcase, if you work carefully.) which might help it run another winter (if lucky) but I'd call it throwing good money after bad.
How poor are they who have not patience. What wound did ever heal, but by degrees? - Iago (Othello Act II, Scene 3)