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Posted

Hey.

 

My 346xp is getting bogged-down too readily. I'll be cutting a bit of wood that it should just chew nicely through but as soon as the revs drop off a bit the chain stops spinning.

 

My hunch is that the engine is outputting plenty of power (awesome compression, all filters and carb spot on etc), but I recently swapped the clutch assembly and I'm wondering if that's the problem.

 

The springs look fine, i.e. no cracks or anything, but I want to open them up a bit to keep the chain engaged at lower revs.

 

Is that foolishness or what?

 

If that sounds half-sensible, what are we talking about; a few tenths of a mm, a couple of mm, half an inch or what?

 

Thanks. S.

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Posted

There's something seriously wrong if it's disengaging the drive with any sort of throttle applied. You should be able to feather the throttle a tiny bit to engage the drive and the engine will labour if the chain can't get moving.

Posted

Would try new ones instead

Cheap and easy to do

And no problems with any I have used so must be something wrong rather than needing a modification

Posted

As its the springs that disengage the clutch, and the centrifugal force that engages it the weaker the springs are the harder the clutch ought to bite…

 

Are the plates / drum glazed?

Posted

As tom says if the springs are weak the drive will engage sooner . That why you need to replace clutch springs if you get chain creep at idle ( correct idle that is ) Also if you can bend a spring to " open it up a bit " it is no longer a spring . .....

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