+1Bigg_Redd said:Buy the time you get a new piston and ring in it you're better off finding a $200-$250 290 in good working order.
smokinjay said:Bigg_Redd said:Buy the time you get a new piston and ring in it you're better off finding a $200-$250 290 in good working order.
+1
Kong said:Offer him fifty bucks for it if the rest of the saw is in very good shape. Go on E-bay and buy yourself a piston and cylinder, it will cost you right about $80. Changing it is about 4-bolts harder than changing a spark-plug and shouldn't take you over 30 minutes if you have any mechanical ability worth mentioning - there are no special tricks to it. It is a very easy fix and you can buy awfully nice saws all day long that people have done this to.
Kong said:I sold the 029 on E-bay about two weeks ago. It brought just a little over $180 and I put a flat rate $23 shipping cost on it. The guy got a good saw at a good price. I also tossed in all the .063/.325 bars and chains I had left - so he got the saw, two 20" bars, a couple of 18" bars, and half a dozen chains with it too.
We just didn't use the saw much. I always thought it was underpowered with a 20" bar on it and the 026 handled an 18" bar just fine, so when I got the 361 there just wasn't any reason at all to keep it. Oh, my son cuts wood with me much of the time, so we generally have two saws running. That works well when one of us gets pinched and of couse we can make short work of just about any tree that grows around here. Anyway, I use the smaller saw most of the time now days (I'm in my 60's) and my son really likes the 361, so there just wasn't any need for the middle saw.
Oh, and I' mentioned this in other posts, I also switched the 026 over to 3/8" chain (16" bar) and just love it, and of course the 361 uses the larger chain - and that is why I got rid of all the .325 stuff.
Highbeam said:I'm just shocked nobody mentioned that this is your opportunity to make this saw a MS390. With a new piston and cylinder anyway, you could just install the 310 or 390 components. Now your 100$ MS290 just became a 500$ MS390.
Am I wrong? I am fairly certain that the MS290/310/390 are the same saw with different cyl/piston combos. Just like the dolmar 6400/7300/7900.
HittinSteel said:He's right in theory a 310/390 P/C will bolt right on........ the problem is there is no after market.
HittinSteel said:That is my understanding..... since the only difference on those saws is piston and cylinder size. The pistons of the different saws will obviously not fit unless you have the matching cylinder though.
HittinSteel said:Exactly, if you want to pay the piper........think I was reading recently that Baily's is working on an aftermarket 390 P/C. Watch out picking fights with what appears to "just" be a 290, never know what might be under the hood. hahahaha
HittinSteel said:I also forgot to mention the old carb will need a new main jet to make up for the increased need of the larger P/C
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