This is an excellent saw for light duty work, I use it for tending to apple and pear trees and the occasional cleanup after a storm. It is big enough for light firewood tasks, but is underpowered for large hardwood pieces. The first thing you should do is buy a Stihl chain for it as the factory Oregon (who makes the husky chains) is a skip link design, featuring fewer cutting teeth and dulls quickly.
In the event that you do remove the side covere with the brake on, which is comparatively difficult, you can make a three prong socket to reset the tension spring. This works much better than chasing a spring around the shop. Your local Husqvarna dealer has a reset tool that they can show you. Lowes might sell Husqvarna, but until they have a parts counter they are not a dealer in my opinion.
What’s wrong with our Husky 3120?
This is our second Husqvarna 3120 our business has been through. It’s a small operation and the 3120 is rarely ever used, still very clean in fact. The first one we had developed an air leak around 300 hours and seized the engine.Now, the second one, no longer under warranty and only with a couple hundred hours is also broken. Today while using it, it made a series of clangs (didn’t feel that rough though) and Husqvarna Chainsaws 350 Rancher stopped. When looking in through the spark plug opening, the engine can be turned over using the starter pulley, but when it reaches the apex, the ONLY way to get it past it so use a saw wrench and a little muscle to turn it over, and when you do it makes a clank sound and abruptly goes past it. Then, it turns freely again until it gets back to the apex and jams.Also, we take excellent care of our equipment, we use Sthil’s, and Echo’s for climbing, and Husky’s for big saws. We have two Husky 372’s with insane hours on them for professional use chainsaws that run without ever a hiccup.Considering how much the 3120 costs, it’s getting really frustrating. Anyone know what kind of problem it has?ThanksOurs is a professional arbor care business that’s been going for nearly 30 years. It’s not something like gasoline, it’s something physical that’s hanging up the engine at it’s apex.
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This is an excellent saw for light duty work, I use it for tending to apple and pear trees and the occasional cleanup after a storm. It is big enough for light firewood tasks, but is underpowered for large hardwood pieces. The first thing you should do is buy a Stihl chain for it as the factory Oregon (who makes the husky chains) is a skip link design, featuring fewer cutting teeth and dulls quickly.
In the event that you do remove the side covere with the brake on, which is comparatively difficult, you can make a three prong socket to reset the tension spring. This works much better than chasing a spring around the shop. Your local Husqvarna dealer has a reset tool that they can show you. Lowes might sell Husqvarna, but until they have a parts counter they are not a dealer in my opinion.
chainsaw trouble?
chainsaw starts but quits when i Husqvarna Chainsaw Filters give it throttle its a husqvarna model 55 rancher could it be the fuel filter or a dirty carburetor?
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Husqvarna Chainsaw Filters
This is an excellent saw for light duty work, I use it for tending to apple and pear trees and the occasional cleanup after a storm. It is big enough for light firewood tasks, but is underpowered for large hardwood pieces. The first thing you should do is buy a Stihl chain for it as the factory Oregon (who makes the husky chains) is a skip link design, featuring fewer cutting teeth and dulls quickly.
In the event that you do remove the side covere with the brake on, which is comparatively difficult, you can make a three prong socket to reset the tension spring. This works much better than chasing a spring around the shop. Your local Husqvarna dealer has a reset tool that they can show you. Lowes might sell Husqvarna, but until they have a parts counter they are not a dealer in my opinion.
Any Information on a Husqvarna Husqvarna Chainsaw Muffler Bolts model 36 Chainsaw With a 24″ Bar?
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This is an excellent saw for light duty work, I use it for tending to apple and pear trees and the occasional cleanup after a storm. It is big enough for light firewood tasks, but is underpowered for large hardwood pieces. The first thing you should do is buy a Stihl chain for it as the factory Oregon (who makes the husky chains) is a skip link design, featuring fewer cutting teeth and dulls quickly.
In the event that you do remove the side covere with the brake on, which is comparatively difficult, you can make a three prong socket to reset the tension spring. This works much better than chasing a spring around the shop. Your local Husqvarna dealer has a reset tool that they can show you. Lowes might sell Husqvarna, but until they have a parts counter they are not a dealer in my opinion.
where can i find a carbide tipped chain for husqvarna 350 18″?
I have a Husqvarna 350 Chainsaw with an 18″ bar. All I can find are the standard Husqvarna brand saw chain and one by Oregon which has the same characteristics. These chains run out pretty fast cutting up fallen trees in my backyard. I found out that some chains for some models have carbide Husqvarna Chainsaw 350 tipped teeth which last alot longer so i can reasonably dice up the trunk of a fallen tree. I would like to find a compatible chain for my chainsaw and its 18″ bar with a good kickback rating.the standard chain has these stats-H30 072G325 .050″/1.3mm95VP-72it doesnt have to match the listed chain’s specs verbatim, but compatible and has carbide teeth and/or feature which makes it last longer before needing maintenance besides tightening the chain.if you write a bs answer or redirect me to a website just because it has a compatibility guide which doesnt help just so you can get your stupid 2 points, you will be checked down and I WILL ensure you do not get the “best answer”.
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I’m a casual user and for around the house after the storms its made cleanup a breeze. Compared to similar makes my friends have its by far the best, but I won’t tell them that. Observations are it’s a little heavy and I was lead to believe it had the quick chain tensioning feature which it did not.
What’s wrong with our Husky 3120?
This is our second Husqvarna 3120 our business has been through. It’s a small operation and the 3120 is rarely ever used, still very clean in fact. The first one we had developed an air leak around 300 hours and seized the engine.Now, the second one, no longer under warranty and only with a couple hundred hours is also broken. Today while using it, it made a series of clangs (didn’t feel that rough though) and Chainsaws Husqvarna stopped. When looking in through the spark plug opening, the engine can be turned over using the starter pulley, but when it reaches the apex, the ONLY way to get it past it so use a saw wrench and a little muscle to turn it over, and when you do it makes a clank sound and abruptly goes past it. Then, it turns freely again until it gets back to the apex and jams.Also, we take excellent care of our equipment, we use Sthil’s, and Echo’s for climbing, and Husky’s for big saws. We have two Husky 372’s with insane hours on them for professional use chainsaws that run without ever a hiccup.Considering how much the 3120 costs, it’s getting really frustrating. Anyone know what kind of problem it has?ThanksOurs is a professional arbor care business that’s been going for nearly 30 years. It’s not something like gasoline, it’s something physical that’s hanging up the engine at it’s apex.
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