Interesting Terry!!!! I'd love to run that saw!!!
Well, I was unable to get any more carbs to play with, so I could try some things. Oh and of course the slow taper idle screws are on back order....sure wanted to have that to send to Randy....but there's still a little time. Got my fingers crossed.
I do have one carb left...its a NOS that has never had gas in it. It had a double D hi screw but I changed that so nothing fancy will be needed. BTW...Thanks Makguy, he supplied me with some carb to play with. Hopefully he will receive his back and add some input to this tread.
This carb will be going to Randy (Mastermind) to be put on and tested on a Dolmar 7900 that is scheduled in September to be ported. I really want to see what this will do on a ported saw and how it compares with the stock carb. Using the same saw will be a good determiner I think!! I hope it does what I expect and not a disappointment.
Here are some pictures of what I use (per Terry's help and advice) so you all get ideas of what is being done.
Here's what's uses... The Micro drill and Pin vice. The jet on the left is the idle jet, .25mm to .30mm. the one on the right is the auxiliary .25mm to .40mm. Just go slow and steady with not a lot of pressure...just feel. Check the needle arm height to make sure that's at factory setting. I would then put on a slow taper idle screw and test. Dial carb is as best as possible and make changes as needed. If rich off idle I would put a couple spacers under carb spring depending how bad it is. I had to this on the ported 6400 to get the quick throttle response back. I don't feel that will be an issue with the ported 7900.
Drilling these jets out feeds the low end off idle and adds to the torque of the saw all the way through the power band. Feeding that much fuel through these jets lessens the amount the Hi is opened. The settings are a little different than stock as the Hi may be almost closed but that's not a problem because the drilled jets are supplying the fuel needed but you can still adjust as need be.
The one thing I did omit was notching the throttle plate just slightly. I wanted to wait for the new screw before I did that to see if that was even required with it installed. If I don't get them I probably will notch it. The saw is getting more fuel at idle and needs more air also to balance things out. With this added fuel though the power increases(torque), the saw pulls better, doesn't bog in the cut. It may not turn any more RPM's but it maintains in the cut. The saw I was testing was turning 11,400 to 12,000 in the cut with a 24" bar buried in wet Pine.
Hope this wasn't to long.....I get kinda windy!!!!