Ok, the normal context of leak down on a 2 stroke chain saw is piston tdc thru spark plug hole for rings, or block carb/exh and check case halves, gaskets and crank seals, impulse line or say tank and carb pressure holding or venting. On a newer 4 mix the valves come into play too. On a car it's intake, exhaust valves, head gasket rings. So normally you have inlet and outlet gauges in psi and you calculate percentage leakage. That's not in the sealed pressure/vacuum maintenance context which is slightly different, but same principle of checking sealing.
My current dilemma is on Briggs small engines the closest thing to a published spec is an unlabelled leak down tester #19413 which I surmise to have a 100 psi full scale inlet dial with target inlet pressure ticked off at about 60% full scale and the outlet gauge looks like 60 psi full scale, but is uncalibrated except for at about 50% full scale it goes from green to red (good/bad). So my question is, does any one have one and know if the 100 psi and 60 psi full scale assumptions are correct? If so, surprisingly Briggs is a-ok with a 50% leaking engine!! Could be, but its a tough one to believe.
thanks
my bad if this is a stretch from directly chainsaw related.
My current dilemma is on Briggs small engines the closest thing to a published spec is an unlabelled leak down tester #19413 which I surmise to have a 100 psi full scale inlet dial with target inlet pressure ticked off at about 60% full scale and the outlet gauge looks like 60 psi full scale, but is uncalibrated except for at about 50% full scale it goes from green to red (good/bad). So my question is, does any one have one and know if the 100 psi and 60 psi full scale assumptions are correct? If so, surprisingly Briggs is a-ok with a 50% leaking engine!! Could be, but its a tough one to believe.
thanks
my bad if this is a stretch from directly chainsaw related.