Terry Syd
Addicted to ArboristSite
Neil, I live on the Comboyne Plateau, to the West of Port Macquarie.
A piped 576! Wow, I'd like to run that beast through some wood. What carburetor do you have on that engine? I actually have the same carb (C1M, 13.5mm venturi) from a stock 576 on my 50cc 450.
A bigger carb is the way to go with these Husky stratos. The strato system is split with the first half of the throttle opening working just the carb - so you can run a big carb because you still have good intake velocity for the low speed circuit. The stock time/area of the intake/strato system can accomodate a lot of flow, but the bottle neck is in the carb and strato butterfly.
I kept the strato and carb flow seperate on the 450 as mine is a work saw, but a racer could do all sorts of wild things. I would probably lean towards two carbs with the strato port carb running a richer mixture. The richer mixture would help flush heat off the piston, the upper transfers and the combustion chamber (then get blown out the exhaust), that would allow for a denser charge in the cylinder and might also allow for some extra compression on an engine. However, if a pipe was packing that rich mixture back in I could forsee some problems. Just got to try it and see.
A piped 576! Wow, I'd like to run that beast through some wood. What carburetor do you have on that engine? I actually have the same carb (C1M, 13.5mm venturi) from a stock 576 on my 50cc 450.
A bigger carb is the way to go with these Husky stratos. The strato system is split with the first half of the throttle opening working just the carb - so you can run a big carb because you still have good intake velocity for the low speed circuit. The stock time/area of the intake/strato system can accomodate a lot of flow, but the bottle neck is in the carb and strato butterfly.
I kept the strato and carb flow seperate on the 450 as mine is a work saw, but a racer could do all sorts of wild things. I would probably lean towards two carbs with the strato port carb running a richer mixture. The richer mixture would help flush heat off the piston, the upper transfers and the combustion chamber (then get blown out the exhaust), that would allow for a denser charge in the cylinder and might also allow for some extra compression on an engine. However, if a pipe was packing that rich mixture back in I could forsee some problems. Just got to try it and see.