You’re right, but guys complain about a pound difference in saws already, they would have a stroke thinking about the size and weight of a turbo!That would be true, but those are temporary power adders.![]()
Not to mention the part of the whole tuned pipe in front of said turbo...You’re right, but guys complain about a pound difference in saws already, they would have a stroke thinking about the size and weight of a turbo!Not to mention making it fit in a work chassis.
Plumb this sucker into the intake of a 500i lol
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The biggest unaddressed issue with the MS201 is the poor fit of the transfer covers. After a little squish cut, a tossed out base gasket, and some fine tuning of the ports.....the little saw becomes a completely different animal.
I just wanna add something about weight, the 201 is heavier than the 200. It may ripass. but Now every one is raving about the super light 2511 up in the tree,
Lightness up tree really counts
but your right about case compression, it would be interesting to know the volume difference between the 200\201. I know it won’t be a lot but it will be significant.
You’re right, but guys complain about a pound difference in saws already, they would have a stroke thinking about the size and weight of a turbo!Not to mention making it fit in a work chassis.
I still haven’t managed to pry one of those covers off. The way it juts into the transfer upper is very irritating. Do you grind that or just leave it alone? I’m not convinced grinding helps much.
Can you say hand grenade?
You’re right, but guys complain about a pound difference in saws already, they would have a stroke thinking about the size and weight of a turbo!Not to mention making it fit in a work chassis.
It’s funny how a pound of weight difference can make a huge negative opinion to a lot of people.
Loggers of the past would carry the IEL Super Twin 52 saw around while guys of now would throw a fit at carrying more than a MS260.![]()
I remember my Dad thought he would get strong by holding a 12lb cannon ball straight out for 10 minutes every three days or so. He tore a deltoid about two weeks in and couldn’t couldn’t lift his arm above his head for three months. I think about that every time I one hand a 201 (roughly 12lbs full with the bar and chain). Mostly now I use the 2511 and think Dad should have tried a 6 pound ball.
I really like light saws.
So taking volume away will give it more movement up though the transfer passages because less time is wasted compressing mixture that will never leave the crankcase anyhow.
Mainly the volume of the charge that you have to work with is the volume change of the piston.
If I have a stock saw that spits back does increasing case volume help? Or opening up lower transfers?
I think the ten series McCulloch is a good example of case volume and how flexible it can be ? Just about everything from 54cc to 82cc being close to the same case volume.
When I was reading about the 36/044 hybrids someone questioned if the bigger cylinder would be starved because of case volume not being able to support the cylinder? I thought did McCulloch consider this going from the SP60 to the SP81? Same case ,both great saws. Or am I confused about this?
The transfer volume matters a lot too.