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It should be 3.5mm on the 372. As a very rough guide 50-90cc 261/550 - 462/572 use 3.5mm, 90+ 661/395 use 4mm for Husqvarna and 4.5mm for Stihl. Small top handles and machines with easy start use 2.7/2.8mm, small saws and regular top handles use 3mm. The average length of the cord is 800mm but this can go up to 1000mm for blowers and brush cutters. Its always worth having some 3.5mm cord in the van as this will fit most machines and can sort out the bigger machines for a quick fix although you may not manage to get it to fit through the starter handle or pulley on the smaller machines. Its always worth changing starter cord once a year as if it does go out in the field it can be clips, springs and recoil springs flying in all directions and a lot of cursing. To give it a quick check pull the starter handle out then pull the handle down the cord and check the cord where it goes into the bottom of the handle as that is the most common place for it to wear. If you have the starter cover off check the cord at the point just after the stopper knot in the starter drum. We sell cord by the metre so you dont have to buy 30 feet of cord at a time.
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Sancha joined the community
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Codswallop... you fishing for puns again?
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There's got to be something wrong with it up the business chain because the saws are great. Remember when the car makers were worried about microchip supplies?
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Stihl made concrete saws with fuel injection for a while before they tried it with chainsaws.
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The sections that have narrowed are where they pass through the muscle wall so not suitable to stent. I’m now stuck here for at least another two days while they check the medication is doing it’s job
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Cant advice for you, only you know. I know a arbor guy over 70 years old. He is not you, and i doubt my friend would ask for advice if he can or not do it. you either do it or you don't. you wont beat a 20 year old confident guy, your only road is being your own boss. You won't be able to get the experience i have, from starting from age 12, you starting at age 50 or so, the only thing you need to focus on is understanding the tools not killing yourself. First thing i would work on is confidence, and go from there.
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Let us know how it goes, refurbishing the carb is always a good idea but don't ignore looking at the condition of the piston as it may have slightly seized causing your issues.
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Hi all Just wanted to let guys know running a predator 38 the difference in changing the pulley from 200mm to 225 mm. The difference was remarkable, quicker recovery time when rev goes down, and better torque, had to do some cutting here and there to fit it. but was well worth it. Less bogging down and faster grinding, specially deeper down.
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With respect, Mr Stubby, that's codswallop!
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What's the deal with the arteries being in the wrong place? I hope all goes well.
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Wordle 1,568 3/6 🟨⬜⬜⬜⬜ ⬜🟩🟨⬜⬜ 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
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Thank you! Well the upshot is they didn’t do any stents as the narrowing arteries are in the wrong place ffs! They’re starting me on some aggressive medication to improve the blood flow, heart muscle pumping etc Then as an outpatient I’ve got to have an mri to ascertain whether I have actually had a minor heart attack and what damage has potentially been done. So gonna have to have a rethink on work strategies and roles, trying to take more of a back seat and supervisory position
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Kushdi Mark , Kushdi .
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There is a glitch in the space/time continuum .
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don't recall that, I do recall being slagged off for posting on the wrong threads though. show me where I said it, please.
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Speed sensor/stress control would be a 1st guess. To rule out solenoid problems, you can just swap the plugs over and see if the solenoid valve work but in reverse configuration. Or use the override wires to disable the stress control, if it perks up and everything works you have identified the fault being the stress control. Obviously don't use it in override for anything other than testing!.
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Don't know if this is relevant to your situation but...... I was having a similar issue with my TW150 and spoke to a really helpful chap on the TW stand at Westonbirt. We went through a few 'could be this or could be thats' but he said one of the very first things to check is the distance of the strobe/sensor away from the flywheel. Even a tiny bit too far and it thinks the flywheel is slowing, the machine is getting overloaded and won't reactivate the in feed rollers. It was exactly THIS. Tiny bit of adjustment off we went again - thank goodness. Hope you have the same success.
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Ethan Jary joined the community
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As above. And you’ll have to find somewhere else to put your washing line.
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Threads like these are quite common. You usually get a variety of replies. A. It’ll be fine, just take it out. B. Pay for a structural engineering/arb consultant to assess. 3. No one can say for sure, people shouldn’t give opinions over the internet based on photos. My take, make sure your gutters and down pipes are clear so water is getting away effectively, and take the tree out. Trees die all the time near houses without heave. This is free advice and as such is worth what you’re paying. Opinions vary of course.
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I just checked my 365 new and it is 3mm.