Yep I did the upgrade, theres nothing tricky about it, just PM Nate fordf150 and tell him what your doing.
He'll sell you the bits you need. The actual modification requres the muffler to come off 3, T25 torx screws from memory. The shrowd around the air filter, bolt holding the top bar and AV mount to the cylinder head. Then remove the carb boot from the cylinder head. Then make sure everything is clean before removing the 4 cylinder head bolts. Don't let crud fall into the engine at this stage. Then the piston comes off by removing the spring pins on the gudgon pin.
Putting the new bits is the reverse except you will need a ring compressor which Nate can sell you, its just a cheap plastic thing.
This was the first time Id pulled a 2 stroke apart, they are simple and designed to pull apart quick and easy.
No fancy tools requried.
I have a couple of links on my work computer which helped me. Ill post them up when I get into work.
If you have'nt run the saw yet in its 64cc form I would before doing the upgrade you will find with a 20 inch bar its pretty dam good. In the 79cc form its a blast.
I also upgraded to the heavy duty air filter. You will also need to tune it up after doing any mods.
If you do the upgrade my understanding is you will have the highest power to weight production built saw In the world. I'm happy for anyone to correct me if this is not true.
Also correct me if i missed anything..... Its been a year or so since i did it.
Cheers
Jeff
no need to remove the carb, after removing all the plastic and handle bar, remove the impulse line from its barb on the cylinder (or you'll tear it with the torx wrench). lift the rear of the air filter holder to disengage it. unhook choke and throttle. i prefer to remove the muffler. unscrew the four bolts that hold the cylinder and lift everything, cylinder, intake boot and carb as a unit. you can have the entire unit sitting on your bench in fifteen minutes. and its easier and faster to swap the carb/intake on the bench instead of in the saw. reassemble in the reverse order after installing the piston. a plastic ring compressor/piston stop makes that job easy and quick. i like to leave the old cylinder gasket in place since it is thinner than the ones that come with new top ends. the stock dolmar gasket is .5mm. the old paper gasket is maybe .030mm.
you have your choice of 84cc aftermarket cylinder (i like the nwp from baileys) or oem dolmar 79cc. the dolmar is way better but costs an extra benjamin. with the dolmar cylinder, a mahle, and paper gasket, i get 150psi at 6300ft altitude. with the nwp and no base gasket i get maybe 130psi. i have heard that it is possible to adapt the older non-catalytic muffler to the 6421 but you might want to try it with the stock muffler first.
these are great, very robust saws even without the upgrade.