How many of those carbs do you have sitting around? My buddy wants his saw a little better than stock.
Just came in from completely tearing down the 272 to two case halves and installing new bearings on the new crankshaft.
You should have been here to here the "crack" of every screw I took out. They stay in if ya tighten 'em.
For me Husqvarna is still the easiest and cheaper to repair then a stihl of the same size, for comparison an 066 kit is well over 200.00, I can get a 395 cylinder kit for less then half that.
Negative after 4 hour's wait they did an ultrasound no blood clots but a very large bakers cyst. Now i have to find an ortho to operate. All day at two places that didn't help at all but i will have to pay. Plus the ortho . Pain 9/10 Awesome.
Let me know how the 272 rebuild goes, pics would be great, I dnt know much about them and just picked up a minty 1994 model
Saw was already "built", crankshaft decided it was time to retire. So really just replacing the crank and bearings. They are just as easy as it's smaller and larger siblings. May post something on it, but hard to piece all the info on a saw that's been tinkered on for years now.
Thanks Steve, appreciate the info, I figured they were similar, I dnt think they make an easier saw series to work on then the 2 series huskies.