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McCulloch PRO MAC 310 600042-07 chainsaw

McCulloch PRO MAC 310 600042-07 chainsaw Parts

Here are the diagrams and repair parts for McCulloch PRO MAC 310 600042-07 chainsaw, as well as links to manuals and error code tables, if available.

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Browse Parts for PRO MAC 310 600042-07 Chainsaw

  • Pkg,bar-16"m for McCulloch PRO MAC 310 600042-07 - Part 214236-33

    General assembly diagram

    Pkg,bar-16"m

    Part #214236-33

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Chain for McCulloch PRO MAC 310 600042-07 - Part 214925-33

    General assembly diagram

    Chain

    Part #214925-33

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Piston Driver for McCulloch PRO MAC 310 600042-07 - Part 63094

    #NI

    All parts diagram

    Piston Driver

    Part #63094

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Clutch Assembly for McCulloch PRO MAC 310 600042-07 - Part 213277

    General assembly diagram

    Clutch Assembly

    Part #213277

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Screw for McCulloch PRO MAC 310 600042-07 - Part 216632

    Handle assemblies diagram

    Screw

    Part #216632

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Drum Sprocket for McCulloch PRO MAC 310 600042-07 - Part 215252

    General assembly diagram

    Drum Sprocket

    Part #215252

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Kit-carrying for McCulloch PRO MAC 310 600042-07 - Part 94364

    #NI

    All parts diagram

    Kit-carrying

    Part #94364

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Flange Carburetor for McCulloch PRO MAC 310 600042-07 - Part 92747

    General assembly diagram

    Flange Carburetor

    Part #92747

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Screw for McCulloch PRO MAC 310 600042-07 - Part 120112

    Power head assembly diagram

    Screw

    Part #120112

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Screw for McCulloch PRO MAC 310 600042-07 - Part 120028

    General assembly diagram

    Screw

    Part #120028

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

McCulloch Chainsaw PRO MAC 310 600042-07 FAQs

For the Mcculloch PRO chainsaw model PRO, the guide bar size depends on the exact PRO-SERIES variant and the matching chain pitch and gauge. Most homeowner gas chainsaws in this class commonly run a 14-inch to 18-inch bar; we recommend confirming the bar length stamped on your current bar before ordering.

How to confirm the correct bar size on your saw

  • Look on the guide bar for a stamped length (often shown as 14 in., 16 in., or 18 in.).
  • Check the chain specs printed on the bar (pitch, gauge, and drive link count).
  • Measure the usable cutting length from the front of the saw body to the bar tip (not the full metal length).
  • Verify the bar mount pattern matches your saw (stud spacing and tensioner hole location).
  • Match the bar to the correct chain; bar length alone is not enough.

Bar length vs. chain specs (what must match)

A “PRO” chainsaw can accept different bars only when these specs match the sprocket and bar groove.

Spec What it affects Where to find it
Bar length Cutting reach and load on engine Stamped on the bar
Chain pitch Fit on drive sprocket Bar stamp or chain package
Chain gauge Fit in bar groove Bar stamp or chain package
Drive links Chain length for that bar Bar stamp or chain package

Why it matters

Using the wrong bar or mismatched chain pitch or gauge can cause poor cutting, thrown chains, overheating, and premature wear on the clutch, sprocket, and bar rails.

Next best step for PRO model PRO

Use our DIY resources to identify the right setup and common wear parts for your saw: chainsaw category landing page.

Last updated: February 2026

Mcculloch chainsaws did not disappear; the Mcculloch name continued after ownership changes, and the brand shifted from its original PRO-LEANING heritage to mostly consumer-focused outdoor power equipment sold under the Mcculloch label. For repair help and parts lookup by model, we use our chainsaw resources to keep older saws running.

What this means for your Mcculloch PRO chainsaw

Even when a brand changes hands, parts support usually becomes model-based, not brand-history-based. For the Mcculloch model number PRO, the most reliable approach is to identify the exact saw version (bar length, serial range, and engine family) and then match parts by diagram and description.

Common items that still drive most chainsaw repairs include:

  • Carburetor and carburetor rebuild parts
  • Fuel lines, fuel filter, and tank vent
  • Spark plug and ignition module
  • Air filter and impulse line
  • Clutch, sprocket, and chain brake parts
  • Bar, chain, and oiler components

Quick troubleshooting if you are fixing an older Mcculloch

Brand changes do not affect the basics of how a 2-cycle gas chainsaw runs. If your saw is hard to start or runs rough, focus on fuel delivery and air leaks first.

  • Drain old fuel; refill with fresh, PROperly mixed 2-cycle fuel
  • Check the fuel lines for cracking or softness
  • Clean or replace the air filter
  • Inspect the spark plug condition and gap
  • Verify the chain brake is fully released before starting

Symptom-to-likely-cause guide

Symptom Most common cause What to check first
Won’t start Fuel issue Fuel lines, filter, carb settings
Starts then dies Lean condition Air leak, clogged carb, tank vent
Runs rough Dirty carb or air leak Carburetor, intake boot, fuel quality
Leaks gas Deteriorated lines Fuel line routing, grommet, tank

Why it matters

Mcculloch ownership history is interesting, but it does not change the repair path. Correctly identifying the exact configuration of your saw prevents ordering the wrong carburetor, fuel line kit, or ignition parts.

For step-by-step DIY help, use our chainsaw repair guide landing page to narrow the fix by symptom and repair type.

Last updated: February 2026

A Mcculloch chainsaw labeled “PRO” is not a single dated model; it is a model family/series name used across multiple PROduction years. For the Mcculloch PRO model number PRO, the most reliable way to date it is by matching the full model tag details and any serial/date code to the correct parts breakdown.

How to identify the exact age (what to check)

Use the information on the saw’s ID tag so we can narrow it to a specific PROduction run:

  • Complete model string (for example, PRO MAC 310 600042-07, not just “PRO”)
  • Type/serial number stamped or printed on the tag
  • Any date code (often a short numeric code near the serial)
  • Engine tag details (sometimes separate from the chassis tag)
  • Carburetor and ignition module markings (helpful when tags are worn)

Quick dating guide: what “PRO” usually means

“PRO” typically indicates a PROfessional-grade Mcculloch saw line, not a specific year. Many older PRO MAC series saws were PROduced in the 1970s through 1990s era, and the exact age depends on the suffix and serial range.

What you have What it tells us What to do next
Only “PRO” Series name only Use the full model tag and suffix
“600042-07” style suffix Revision/version identifier Match it to the correct illustrated parts list
Serial/date code present Best clue to build period Decode the date code and confirm with parts

Why it matters

Getting the year range right helps you order the correct carburetor kit, fuel lines, ignition parts, bar, and chain. Small revisions (like a “-07” suffix) can change fuel system routing and mounting patterns, which affects fit.

Next best step

Use our DIY resources to narrow symptoms and confirm which assemblies match your saw:

Last updated: February 2026

Mcculloch chainsaws are generally considered solid, homeowner-friendly saws when they’re maintained correctly: they’re built to deliver dependable cutting power, reasonable durability, and comfortable handling for typical yard and firewood work. For your Mcculloch PRO chainsaw, overall “quality” comes down to condition, tune, and routine wear parts.

What “good quality” means for a chainsaw

A chainsaw can feel high-quality when it starts easily, idles smoothly, accelerates without bogging, and oils the bar and chain consistently. The biggest drivers are fuel system health, ignition condition, and cutting setup.

Common signs your saw is in good shape

  • Starts within a few pulls when cold (with choke used correctly)
  • Idles without the chain creeping
  • Revving is crisp (no hesitation or surging)
  • Bar oil is visibly flinging off the tip at speed
  • Cuts straight with minimal vibration

Quick quality check you can do in 5 minutes

  1. Chain and bar: Confirm the chain is sharp and PROperly tensioned.
  2. Oiling: With the bar pointed at clean cardboard, run at half throttle; you should see an oil line.
  3. Air filter: A dirty filter makes any saw feel weak and “low quality.”
  4. Fuel: Fresh, PROperly mixed fuel (and a clean fuel filter) prevents hard starting and rough running.
  5. Spark plug: Check for heavy carbon or a wet plug that points to fuel or ignition issues.

Common issues vs. what they usually point to

Symptom Most common cause Typical fix
Won’t start Old fuel, fouled plug, clogged carb Refresh fuel, service plug, carb clean/rebuild
Runs rough Dirty carb, air leak, clogged filter Clean carb, inspect fuel lines, replace filter
Leaking gas Cracked fuel line, loose grommet Replace fuel lines and seals
Poor cutting Dull chain, wrong depth gauges Sharpen and set rakers

Why it matters

A well-tuned Mcculloch can cut smoothly and safely; a neglected saw can feel underpowered, vibrate more, and increase kickback risk. Keeping the chain sharp and the fuel system clean does more for “quality” than any brand label.

For step-by-step help, we recommend our DIY resources like chainsaw care and troubleshooting tips and tips for a hard to start chainsaw.

Last updated: February 2026

For the Mcculloch PRO MAC 310 chainsaw (model PRO, type 600042-07), the engine displacement is about 35 cc (approximately 34.4 cc). That number is the key spec to use when comparing performance, tuning, and matching engine-related parts.

What “cc” means on your Mcculloch chainsaw

Engine displacement (cc) is the cylinder volume. It helps you match the saw to the job and avoid mix-ups when similar Mcculloch names exist.

  • Higher cc typically supports longer bars and heavier cutting
  • Lower cc is lighter and better for limbing and smaller firewood
  • cc is not the same as bar length; bars can be swapped
  • cc helps narrow down carburetor and fuel-system configurations

Quick reference

Model identification Displacement
Mcculloch PRO MAC 310 (600042-07) ~35 cc (34.4 cc)

Why it matters

Using the correct displacement helps you choose compatible fuel-system and ignition components and prevents ordering the wrong parts for a different “PRO Mac” series saw.

If your saw is hard to start or runs poorly, use tips for a hard to start chainsaw for step-by-step checks before making carburetor adjustments.

Last updated: February 2026

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