I've seen worse in service.It don't look that bad, to tell the truth, I wish you were closer I would deep clean it and see for sure.
I see surface rust and no pitting and that is a good sign
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I've seen worse in service.It don't look that bad, to tell the truth, I wish you were closer I would deep clean it and see for sure.
I see surface rust and no pitting and that is a good sign
Facts. Ole' boy probably never cleaned it and "lubed it" with WD40 and stuck in his sock drawer. There's probably fuzzies and dried lube and a little bit of rust under the stocks and in the trigger. It could be back and functioning in fifteen minutes.I've seen worse in service.
Well, this is a firearm forum. They have chainsaw forums.Let's try a slightly different question to see if it helps better illustrate OP point of view:
I know this is an extreme example but humor me.
If your neighbors gas "chainsaw" would not start and they asked you if you know someone who can fix it.
You know nothing about a gas chainsaw because the chainsaw you own is electric.
You may be able to fix it, but in the future, anything that goes wrong with it will be your responsibility.
In the future, if the chain comes off that chainsaw and injures the neighbor, will the family blame you or even worse... sue you?
From a liability standpoint, even if it turns out to be a simple repair, is it better to just take the chainsaw down to the small engine repair shop and let them repair it?
Its the good will forumWell, this is a firearm forum. They have chainsaw forums.
Exactly! A good cleaning and teaching her how to clean and operate is a good educational experience; good will.Its the good will forum
teaching her how to clean and operate is a good educational experience; good will.