I tried my hand porting a couple Chinese saws, my 62cc timberpro and a 46cc one, this is about the 62.
I widened and squared the intake port but left the top and bottom of it alone.
I opened the bottom of the transfers up as much as I dared, I cut out the devider up to where the top of the wrist pin would be at bdc.
I raised the exhaust port a little over 1/16 and widened it, rounding the sides a bit, it was square stock, I also made the exhaust a little bigger at the muffler flange but theres not a lot of material there stock so its only 1/8 taller and wider than stock.
I ground 1/16 off the bottom off the piston skirt on the intake side, 1/8 off under the wrist pin to help the transfer timing and 1/16 off the top by the transfers to add blow down.
I opened the muffler inlet up to match the now bigger exhaust port, I had gutted the muffler before so that was done, this saw was loud as hell so I welded up one of the muffler outlets, its still plenty loud.
With no base gasket the squish is .027 and the cold compression is 160.
This saw has a tiny carb, intake and exhaust/muffler flange so I didn't do anything extreme as it never going to rev really high.
This worked out well, the saw free revs the same rpm as before out of the cut but doesn't drop as much rpm in the cut, its about a 1000 rpm higher while cutting and has more tq so you can push on it more without it slowing down.
I have a 8 pin rim and archer .325 chain on the 20 inch timberpro bar. It came with a 7 tooth spur sprocket, I up graded to the 8 a while ago, with the stock motor the 8 would slow it down in big wood if you pushed on it, ported it doesn't slow down.
Pics in the next post I hope.
I widened and squared the intake port but left the top and bottom of it alone.
I opened the bottom of the transfers up as much as I dared, I cut out the devider up to where the top of the wrist pin would be at bdc.
I raised the exhaust port a little over 1/16 and widened it, rounding the sides a bit, it was square stock, I also made the exhaust a little bigger at the muffler flange but theres not a lot of material there stock so its only 1/8 taller and wider than stock.
I ground 1/16 off the bottom off the piston skirt on the intake side, 1/8 off under the wrist pin to help the transfer timing and 1/16 off the top by the transfers to add blow down.
I opened the muffler inlet up to match the now bigger exhaust port, I had gutted the muffler before so that was done, this saw was loud as hell so I welded up one of the muffler outlets, its still plenty loud.
With no base gasket the squish is .027 and the cold compression is 160.
This saw has a tiny carb, intake and exhaust/muffler flange so I didn't do anything extreme as it never going to rev really high.
This worked out well, the saw free revs the same rpm as before out of the cut but doesn't drop as much rpm in the cut, its about a 1000 rpm higher while cutting and has more tq so you can push on it more without it slowing down.
I have a 8 pin rim and archer .325 chain on the 20 inch timberpro bar. It came with a 7 tooth spur sprocket, I up graded to the 8 a while ago, with the stock motor the 8 would slow it down in big wood if you pushed on it, ported it doesn't slow down.
Pics in the next post I hope.