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Case Compression, Let's Talk About It

rogue60

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Anyone ever run a saw below sea level like down the bottom of one the big open cut pits? might blow the cylinder off lol
 

rogue60

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While there is a little bit of compression under the piston, it’s more a vacuum to pull the air and fuel through the carb into the bottom end.

A well tuned muffler or pipe will help pull the charge through the transfer ports better thus creating a little more vacuum than a stock saw can.

That extra vacuum created will pull more air and fuel when the intake port opens.

Then the cycle repeats.
Technically speaking air isn't sucked/pulled in it's pushed in on all naturally aspirated engines.
 

Mastermind

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Technically speaking air isn't sucked in it's pushed in on all naturally aspirated engines.

True. The weight of atmospheric pressure pushes it into any area that has a pressure of less than 14.7psi at sea level.

Takes me back to carburetion classes in the early 80s.
 

Al Smith

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Conversely talking about a pressure can muffler .Once the pressure in the can equals to pressure in the cylinder no more transfer can take place . One might think eliminating the muffler would be the cure .Then because of how small a chainsaw carb is it would over run it's capacity to supply fuel .Bigger is not always better either ,giant carb on a small displacement engine if it would run will load it up .If it would idle it would do so blowing black smoke and cough and wheeze on a spool up .You have to keep things in balance so to speak else it just will not run right .
 

Wanab

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Conversely talking about a pressure can muffler .Once the pressure in the can equals to pressure in the cylinder no more transfer can take place . One might think eliminating the muffler would be the cure .Then because of how small a chainsaw carb is it would over run it's capacity to supply fuel .Bigger is not always better either ,giant carb on a small displacement engine if it would run will load it up .If it would idle it would do so blowing black smoke and cough and wheeze on a spool up .You have to keep things in balance so to speak else it just will not run right .


At what point do you exceed the capacity of your muffler outlet.
 

Wanab

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The way I see it there is no correct percent. That may get you close but what engines really like is when you balance size with VE. Engines near or over 100% require larger outlets than conventional thinking will allow.
 

Al Smith

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All true but now another story that goes back to the AS days .A guy near Cincinnati became the proud owner of a brand new 880 Stihl .He got carried away with a die grinder and punched the muffler outlet to about 150 percent and leaned the carb high speed jet .Wound up like a model air plane engine .Myself and others caution him on that .Might have made it a week before he cooked it .Not too long after that on flea bay,low hours Stihl 880 $400 on a $1300 saw .Morel of that story is of you want to experiment use a cheaper saw not the most expensive .
 

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The way I see it there is no correct percent. That may get you close but what engines really like is when you balance size with VE. Engines near or over 100% require larger outlets than conventional thinking will allow.

I wonder if it is actually possible to achieve over 100% volumetric efficiency without a tuned pipe, or some type of boost?
 

Stump Shot

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I wonder if it is actually possible to achieve over 100% volumetric efficiency without a tuned pipe, or some type of boost?

Absolutely, it's the saw that runs like a mfr and uses fuel like a drunken sailor. To where some of it s actually being lost out the exhaust port, this is 100% +.
Our job is to get as close to 100% as possible without going over At least that's my findings that formed my general opinion of the thing.
 

Al Smith

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Those megaphones go back to the early days of 2 cycle karting .Some were huge like a tuba .You have to remember how large the carbs were and often had two or more . If you were in the back of the pack they blew so much raw fuel with caster oil in it you'd look like an oil field worker after a race .
 

Al Smith

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When I built the slide pipe for the mini mac I experimented with it I tried just running the cone with out the slide .Talk about loud but it over ran the little carb at about 2/3 throttle .
 

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Yes, it is a spencerpaving saw. I just like the style of the (silencer) and I am sure that a big crankcase is good, for a 2-stroke engine, If you use a calculated pipe or like in the picture a megafon. But a regular Muffler dont help the engine suck fuel from the crankcase so much as a pipe do.
 

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Yes, it is a spencerpaving saw. I just like the style of the (silencer) and I am sure that a big crankcase is good, for a 2-stroke engine, If you use a calculated pipe or like in the picture a megafon. But a regular Muffler dont help the engine suck fuel from the crankcase so much as a pipe do.

I've watched that saw run.....about made my ears bleed.
 
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