Stihl 036 scored piston?

   / Stihl 036 scored piston? #21  
Well if anything BG its a learning experience. As a former logger for 30 years, i discovered a little about chainsaws but mostly when they wouldn't start or minor mechanical or fuel path difficulties. I never had a saw (any saw) last more than a couple -3 years before it was wore out and tossed and never had the inclination to rebuild any one of them. May have saved some money but I was too wore out at night to start messing with saws that were past. Kind of regret that and am pulling for you to get this saw "as new"
 
   / Stihl 036 scored piston? #22  
Sounds like you got a good handle on it. I agree to get a new cylinder. Dont try to save that one IMO.

And the one pic of the piston shows the deal with the rings that I was talking about.
 
   / Stihl 036 scored piston?
  • Thread Starter
#23  
Thanks for the positive thoughts, arrow. I'm pretty beat from my cubicle job by the time I get home, but tinkering with the saw is interesting and I've always enjoyed turning wrenches. Plus, the more designs you fully examine, the better your design "sense" gets. I steal ideas from everywhere I can!
 
   / Stihl 036 scored piston?
  • Thread Starter
#24  
Captains log, day 21 ... still no sight of land.
Got all my parts and tools & started to begin the job of reassembling the new jug & piston, when I noticed something.
What's wrong with this picture?

P7290001.JPG
 
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   / Stihl 036 scored piston? #25  
That aint gonna work. Are those the bolts that came out of the base?? Most saws use either an allen head or a torx head bolt so you have clearence. Probabally an 8mm. You may have to get some new bolts with the right style of head. Thats what the holes through all the fins are for, so you can get at them with a torx driver:thumbsup:
 
   / Stihl 036 scored piston? #26  
Using wrong bolts with huge heads that wont clear creating angle.


Didnt you say you used a torx 27 to remove the cylinder bolts? Thats what should have been in there torx 27 heads.

BG you said you had a service manual. Better start using it. All the bolt sizes etc are listed. Cylinder bolts. 036 = IS-M5x20


I just looked you said torx wrench to remove cylinder bolts.

Okay, got the jug off last night after some difficulty. The long series of holes through the fins on the jug/head were misaligned with the bolts and almost exactly the same diameter as my Stihl torx scrench - so the bit wouldn't engage the bolts. Typical, shoddy German engineering! Sorry, as an American engineer, I couldn't resist...
Had to open up the holes in 2 locations with an N sized drill to seat the bit:
 
   / Stihl 036 scored piston?
  • Thread Starter
#27  
Guys - sorry about the confusion - my fault in expressing myself poorly.
Allow me to explain:
I have all the bolts laid out on a board, in the shop, just as I removed them.
I didn't want to disturb my "dirty teardown layout", so I just gabbed 2 bolts to show my dilemma.
What can I say - I'm a little OCD about this stuff.

What I was trying to show is that the surfaces that the bolt heads bear against weren't machined,
and are far from being parallel to the machined flange that mates to the crankcase .
The Torx bolts would sit in there the same way.
It's as-cast & the flange faces have about a 7 or 8 degree draft angle to them.
Even if I could torque those bolts to spec without snapping heads, they won't last long once I start cutting.

I did get a Wiha 2.7mm torque wrench along with a red, plastic ring compressor kit and a flywheel removal tool for 22/26mm-1.5 pitch.
I'm all about doing this job by the book (service manual). Just this setback put me off my game plan a bit.
Very disappointing to have all the stuff finally ready to go, only to discover that the star of the show isn't ready to play ball.

So I went to Harbor Freight and got their 6" x-y cross slide vise.
I'm going to do something foolish and use it on my drill press to mill the flange faces as flat as I can get them.
I'll be taking very light cuts with a 5/16" 2 flute end mill and will have the jug tightly clamped to a 1/2" steel plate with
the flange oriented vertical and 3 of the flange bolts securing it to the steel plate.

Like shooting fish in a barrel - if I don't hit my foot.
 
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   / Stihl 036 scored piston? #28  
Thanks for explaining it. I can see what you were showing now. The oem one is flat across.

May I ask what brand cylinder that is?
 
   / Stihl 036 scored piston? #29  
Thanks for explaining it. I can see what you were showing now. The oem one is flat across.

May I ask what brand cylinder that is?

That would be my question as well, if the OEM one truly is supposed to be flat. IDK, I never had an 036 appart.

On a side note, I think you will be fine milling it. Its just cast aluminum and cuts easy. But I would use a 4-flute, and with a 5/16 cutter and aluminum, I'd be zinging at about 2500rpm if your press will go that high.
 
   / Stihl 036 scored piston?
  • Thread Starter
#30  
Thanks for explaining it. I can see what you were showing now. The oem one is flat across.

May I ask what brand cylinder that is?

48mm Cylinder Kit for Stihl from Northwood Saw for $89.95.
 

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