I’d imagine Nick could come up with a foam filter and lo pro stack that would fit under the low top. Not sure if there would be enough foam surface area for it to be effective or not
Yep. Or Redbeard. SameWho is nick?
Must be mortalli tool
There's a british engine builder named David Vizard. Ended up in the States. He did a lot of flowbench work, some of it on what he calls "stub stacks". They were small smooth radius plates that took the place of velocity stacks but were designed to be compact and smooth the entry flow to carbs.Adaptor is something like this but that's not the model of my final design. The factory clip holds it down still.
View attachment 325075 View attachment 325076 View attachment 325077
Ain’t gon’ fit a Chihl660I’d be interested in a setup like that.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Soon you say...[emoji848]I plan to whip them up on a cnc here soon.
Ill gauge interest to see how many we want.
Might be smart to have Ole Red dynamometer one.
Soon you say...[emoji848]
I know brother just busting you!You know the trials and tribulations of which I deal with in a multitude of areas...
It has been on the board for like two years. It's ready to go.
K&n needs to produce the filter, and sock. I'd love to make a package unit. But not everyone wants a k&n, and uni never returned my messages about a custom run.
Good points there. Imo for you guys out west both filters suck. Especially since there is no air injection. An oiled foam unit would be a perfect solution. Sounds like the “red beard” aftermarket filter would be awesome.So let's assume that the HD does restrict flow vs the standard setup.
Now, let's expose both of those setups to the same amount of dust and run em on the dyno again. Back in '08, when I still had the standard setup on my saw, I got halfway through the face cut on a 36" red fir (first tree of the morning, fresh filter) and the filter was so plugged that the saw wouldn't rev. Cleaned it, had to stop most of the way through the back cut and clean it again.
The HD goes for much longer before it chokes out. I know this kind of thing doesn't matter when you only cut at GTGs or live in a wet place where there isn't much dust, but some folks actually need the air filter to stop more than just a few saw chips.
Did you advance the timing? They like a little bit, but too much and they pop. Nice results though Joe. Nice wide powerband.
The key is cast in so u have to use a thin burr on it it with whatever power tool you have. Aim is to grind enough off the key to turn the flywheel counter clockwise 1-2 fin widths which is a couple degrees (about 1/4-1/3 key width). No real science to it. If it cuts faster with the advance and don’t pop in the cut your good. If it pops and no performance improvement dial it back a little. You should notice a minor torque gain.How to advance the timing on these, Mason? Have a couple of these I want to play with.