My Stihl 660 randomly started idling a bit it didn’t seem like a big deal, I just figured I needed to adjust the carb. I kept cutting and the saw reved high like it was running out of gas and quit running. It still had about a quarter tank of gas. I let the saw cool down and now it won’t start at all. it has plenty of compression. I’m figuring an air leak? Could it be the fuel filter? Where should I start checking for an air leak?
Pull the muffler/muffler cover and take a pic of the piston and ring(s). Post it here. If it developed an air leak, there could be scoring on that piston, and on the cylinder wall. I wouldn’t try starting it again till you see for sure. Could do more damage.
Thanks, I’ll pull the muffler and take a look. Might be a couple days before I get a chance to get at it. I’ll report back
I pulled the muffler quick and good news the p and C look good. Looks like an easy fix, but how the heck do I get at the bolts to tighten them?
WOW... There should be 4 access holes starting at the top of the cylinder. Most likely torx head screws.
Glad it's an easy fix, but I haven't seen bolts back out that much on a cylinder before. That's pretty wild.
Yes. The air filter plastic, then the top plastic. It has 3 or 4 screws holding it on. I don't remember without looking.
Wait a minute here....I thought only Husqvarna had screws / bolts come loose. At least thats what the internet says. Joking aside, I'm glad you didn't end up with a damaged engine from this. Luckily the air leak was so large and quick there wasn't enough time to melt down.
Thanks 2 more questions. do the bolts need to be set at a certain torque? should I use loctite on the bolts?
I’d pull the loose ones out, one at a time, loctite and re install just snug to a little more than snug. Then pull the back two, one at a time and loctite and reinstall, a little more than snug Then cross pattern tighten incrementally. With a T handle, until the shaft starts to twist. I’m sure there is a torque value you could find if you want to go with thst
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Not to cause you more work, but trying to prevent issues down the road. I’d be concerned about sawdust getting sucked into the base gasket area with only a metal base gasket. If it were me I would clean it up as good as I could, remove the cylinder, clean the area, and then bolt it back down
You can pretty much tighten them all you can get out of a T handle. They are M6 where most others are M5