James Miller
Addicted to ArboristSite

I agree. I was just going to leave the jug alone as I have not tried port work on a saw before.I wish I understood a little better what part of the port you are talking about, a picture or a drawing would help. If you grind the top you raise the port and if the upper side then how much. Need help but I like the idea.
I wish I understood a little better what part of the port you are talking about, a picture or a drawing would help. If you grind the top you raise the port and if the upper side then how much. Need help but I like the idea.
Here is a picture. Not my cylinder or my work but from someone else who did some nice work. This is a nice example of what I was referencing to. Do not raise the ports, but point them toward the intake.
View attachment 770566
Thank you. Seems to be a big difference between it and a 3400. More then I expected.Sounds good
Thank you. Seems to be a big difference between it and a 3400. More then I expected.
I've read a few times on the forums that a 3700 with the muffler opened up will run with a stock 4000.Aww well that's good I'd like to try those models I have a 4000 and probably 1day will need a 3700 top end on it so good to see how they run. Only a couple cc difference but this porting talk sounds good for getting those couple cc power back
I've read a few times on the forums that a 3700 with the muffler opened up will run with a stock 4000.
I've got a stock 4000 and a mildly ported 3700 with a muffler mod and running them back to back there is still a difference,the 4000 has more torque and will cut a little faster.I've read a few times on the forums that a 3700 with the muffler opened up will run with a stock 4000.
How much better did it run?
Well it is hard to say. I dropped the cylinder, opened the muffler, port matched the exhaust port on cylinder to the muffler, cleaned up the intake, did the work on the transfer ports similar to the picture, opened the intake port some and did not lower or raise it, and did the same to the exhaust port. Then advanced the timing.
Was on a 3700 and when done I used a tach and got 13000 rpm with bar and chain. Still have the saw and it still runs great. I did not use a timing wheel on it and did not go crazy with the porting. I used a piece of sand paper on all the edges of the ports to make sure they were a little rounded with no sharp edges for rings to hang up on.
Cool man sounds like you did good. Thanks for writing that up I guess we'd need to get into the port mapping and the real nitty gritty to do much else