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small mac 110 chainsaw
I did a search on the conversion forum and didn't see it mentioned, any idea what size motor it is? I haven't torn it down, or noticed a cc sticker anywhere..It couldn't be only 11 cc could it? I notice mc Culloch often uses the first to numbers as the displacement size... been ripping apart a few donated motors tonight...
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RE: small mac 110 chainsaw
Its probally 1.1 cubic inches which convert to 18 cc but I just guessing.
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RE: small mac 110 chainsaw
I have one that's still in the saw. I changed it to a 14" roller tip bar. It is 32CC or 2 c.i..
It does not make the best conversion in the world. The carb is on the front. |
RE: small mac 110 chainsaw
possibly a 32 cc ? WOW , I would have never believed it could be even that big ...I'm going to have to strip it out and take a look...
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RE: small mac 110 chainsaw
I've seen a couple pictures of converted ones on here in the last couple years.
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RE: small mac 110 chainsaw
At different times that saw was called a Mac-30 and Mac-110. I believe that it is 30-32cc. Im not sure if it even has ball bearings. It was the elcheapo-delux chainsaw of its day and one I will never try to convert.
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RE: small mac 110 chainsaw
I stripped most of the stuff of the little saw, and I will say onething, the motor seems way heavy for its size, almost like it was a steel case and not plastic....the saw I tore apart was quite old and the housing and most of the shrouding was metal, not plastic...no idea how old it was.
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RE: small mac 110 chainsaw
Back around 1970 I had a Mac 10-10 chain saw. My father-in law had one, so I bought one. It was light and powerfull. Ran real nice. I sold it to my boss at work 4-5 years later and it sill ran like new. He really liked it. I have not seen any since. Wish I could get my hands on a good one!!!! Capt,n
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