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takes fuel to make power
Are you gutting them Scott?
takes fuel to make power
Basically the fresh air is creating a "Dam" between the fuel charge and the exhaust gasses (pressure differential) and pushes the spent gasses out of the exhaust port so less of the fuel charge is lost out of the muffler before having a chance to ignite and do work.
Got a couple new smoother ones....lol
ZenoahI cannot take credit, it is how they dumbed down the theory of operation so they could explain it to us mechanics at the service school.
Useless trivia: Does anybody know who pioneered this technology?
Are you gutting them Scott?
Zenoah
do you know what year it was patented?Negative, Zenoah was the first company to implement it, but a man named Honda designed the first Strato engine.
You’re so difficultNegative, Zenoah was the first company to implement it, but a man named Honda designed the first Strato engine.
nope. I don't see a reason too
As far as I can tell Randy, you pioneered this strato-intact 261 porting method (I read about it on your MS261 VS MS261 C-M Comparison thread on another forum site) four years ago this month. I'm sure you've refined your methods an awfully lot since... and the saw got a major face-lift. With all that in mind, do you think these type II 261s are any stronger running than those OE models were after your porting & mods? Have you found better port timing numbers (or come up with any other tricks) since?
I see something weird in the cylinder extensions.
Are they taper cut on the sides?
do you know what year it was patented?
I see something weird in the cylinder extensions.
Are they taper cut on the sides?