Anthony_Va.
XPW Fan Club
It looks strong in that big Oak. I cut Oak like that quite a bit and I could'nt keep up with that saw with my MM'd 660. Not close. Good work there B.
Brad here's a picture for you an Fatguy. A used crusty old 66 muffler with a brazed in plate I had lying around. Alot more work than just grinding out the front plate. Without brazing in the plate after removing all the guts in the muffler the muffler is weak and will crack, and you can't perfectly port match the muffler to the cylinder because of the over lap in the muffler opening. I do this little mod to all my 66's, along with matching everything else including cases. Paying attention to "detail" is a must if one expects to have an excellent running saw, especially if it's your own. LOL
What's your normal time frame for a build like this?
It depends on the saw. Some need more blowdown than others. Blowdown is the number of degrees from when the exhaust first starts to open until the transfers start to open. This saw currently has 28° of BD. That's a lot, too much IMHO. I left it that way just to see how it would respond. I just got home from putting a tank of fuel through it. It runs great, but as expected, didn't turn the RPMs I wanted, even with the high exhaust. I've got the cylinder back on the bench and will be raising the transfers about 5°. That should help feed the cylinder at high RPMs. Other saws would like this much BD. The 7900 comes to mind there.
do you charge the customer for the high quality self tapping screw muffler mod??
You are right. I shouldn't have done that.
It's the wood. This is super hard Oak and it's frozen. Just this morning, the chain was sharpened with a file/jig and the rakers set with an Oregon combo guage.
I think mine's still faster
Whats wrong with the Muffler mod? J/W what you would do differently? Looks pretty good to me. Enlighten us? Maybe we can learn something new,.
Brad, thanks for the info, pics and vids. I'm goin to port something soon and all this helps!
I will bring my 6" angle grinder over we can start on the 346ne:hmm3grin2orange:
Brad -
How much bar do you think that one could handle buried in say frozen white oak?
I'm interested more from a milling standpoint but sometime regular cutting also. Last week I was burying my 660 w/ a DP muffler and 32" bar in frozen maple without it bogging down.
And I'm wondering if you think the 660 you ported for redlinefever would handle a 42" bar in the cut, before I buy $90 worth of chains ($30@) for it.
/edit - and I just noticed Bailey's has free shipping for over $200 again, so maybe 6 chains
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