High Quality Chainsaw Bars Husqvarna Toys Hockfire Saws

Preparing to port first saw - which one, and what method?

jacktheripper

Papa Squat
GoldMember
Local time
3:13 PM
User ID
28875
Joined
Apr 5, 2024
Messages
252
Reaction score
590
Location
Wyoming
Country flag
Hey everyone,

I have been around the forum almost daily for the last year, and I have been fixing, building, and restoring saws for longer. I have done a number of ground-up builds, small performance mods (muff mods, timing advances, base gasket deletes, carb mods, air filter mods, etc.). I have had a blast doing these stock-mod builds, but I am envious of the skill that many here have when it comes to port work. I initially wasn't too interested in ported saws, but an 034s from @drf256 changed my mind on that.

I have been acquiring knowledge and tools for porting my first saw, and I think I'm at the point where I'd like to try it. I don't have access to a lathe or machining tools, nor do I have a right angle grinder, so my first port job will likely be a pretty simple one.

I have this grinder, a full selection of double cut burrs, diamond balls, polishing mandrels, etc. I have a timing wheel on a drill chuck as well.

I have a few good stock candidates for porting: Husky 266 and 272, Stihl 024 and 038m. I have additional OEM cylinders for the 266, the 024, and the 038M in case I totally mess up.

Which should I start with first, and what numbers/shapes/etc should I be working with?

Thanks for the help.
 

Woodwackr

Here For The Long Haul!
GoldMember
Local time
3:13 PM
User ID
28333
Joined
Jan 18, 2024
Messages
2,518
Reaction score
11,627
Location
ID
Country flag
Hey everyone,

I have been around the forum almost daily for the last year, and I have been fixing, building, and restoring saws for longer. I have done a number of ground-up builds, small performance mods (muff mods, timing advances, base gasket deletes, carb mods, air filter mods, etc.). I have had a blast doing these stock-mod builds, but I am envious of the skill that many here have when it comes to port work. I initially wasn't too interested in ported saws, but an 034s from @drf256 changed my mind on that.

I have been acquiring knowledge and tools for porting my first saw, and I think I'm at the point where I'd like to try it. I don't have access to a lathe or machining tools, nor do I have a right angle grinder, so my first port job will likely be a pretty simple one.

I have this grinder, a full selection of double cut burrs, diamond balls, polishing mandrels, etc. I have a timing wheel on a drill chuck as well.

I have a few good stock candidates for porting: Husky 266 and 272, Stihl 024 and 038m. I have additional OEM cylinders for the 266, the 024, and the 038M in case I totally mess up.

Which should I start with first, and what numbers/shapes/etc should I be working with?

Thanks for the help.
I believe, without a lathe the timing wheel won't really make much difference. You won't be adjusting that.
Pic a saw that you don't really care about :p or, at least a cylinder. might start with one of those 036 cylinders I sent you...one that is scored too much to be usable.
 

jacktheripper

Papa Squat
GoldMember
Local time
3:13 PM
User ID
28875
Joined
Apr 5, 2024
Messages
252
Reaction score
590
Location
Wyoming
Country flag
I believe, without a lathe the timing wheel won't really make much difference. You won't be adjusting that.
Pic a saw that you don't really care about :p or, at least a cylinder. might start with one of those 036 cylinders I sent you...one that is scored too much to be usable.

I would think that I could definitely use a timing wheel to check stock port timing, and adjust intake/exhaust duration if recommended. I might be able to get into the transfers with a ball hone at an angle on the bigger bore cylinders (038m and 272). I have a ported 034s, but no longer have a stock 036, so I'd rather not mess with porting the 036 jugs at the moment. I figured somebody might chime in and recommend one of these saws as being easier to do, or more responsive to a light port job than others.
 

Powerstroke Cowboy

Pinnacle OPE Member
Yearly GoldMember
Local time
3:13 PM
User ID
26178
Joined
Feb 23, 2023
Messages
1,519
Reaction score
4,806
Location
Montana
Country flag
Whether you cut the base pr squish, you will definitely want/need the degree wheel so you know where the port timing is, and where to go and end up. It's essential, without it your just blindly guessing.

I'd do the biggest bore cylinder you have.

Or the 038 if you if you plan to try doing the transfers. You can always stack up cutting disks to grind the upper transfers since you don't have the angle tool. The stacked cutting wheels work, but a bigger bore and dual transfers make it simpler.
 

MemphisMechanic

Unreliable Chainsaw Enthusiast
Local time
4:13 PM
User ID
14442
Joined
Nov 6, 2020
Messages
142
Reaction score
352
Location
Memphis, TN
Country flag
I have ported six saws. I exclusively do what a lot of guys call a "woods port" which means you're deleting the base gasket and cutting the ports for better airflow and timing numbers. You leave the additional power gains on the table that would come from using a lathe to cut the base and squish band, but do still get substantial gains over stock.

The first saw I ported was an 044 and I would definitely recommend that size of saw. The second one was a 661, and it was much easier given the larger cylinder size. Smaller engines require smaller amounts of material to be removed in a tighter space.

You absolutely need to spend $30 on a timing wheel and drill chuck, so that you can time the saw and lay out exactly how much material to remove.

I'd suggest doing the 266 first; it's a big enough saw to be easier to work on, and you have a spare cylinder if you mess the first one up.
 

Woodwackr

Here For The Long Haul!
GoldMember
Local time
3:13 PM
User ID
28333
Joined
Jan 18, 2024
Messages
2,518
Reaction score
11,627
Location
ID
Country flag
I have ported six saws. I exclusively do what a lot of guys call a "woods port" which means you're deleting the base gasket and cutting the ports for better airflow and timing numbers. You leave the additional power gains on the table that would come from using a lathe to cut the base and squish band, but do still get substantial gains over stock.

The first saw I ported was an 044 and I would definitely recommend that size of saw. The second one was a 661, and it was much easier given the larger cylinder size. Smaller engines require smaller amounts of material to be removed in a tighter space.

You absolutely need to spend $30 on a timing wheel and drill chuck, so that you can time the saw and lay out exactly how much material to remove.

I'd suggest doing the 266 first; it's a big enough saw to be easier to work on, and you have a spare cylinder if you mess the first one up.
How do you alter timing without machine work?
 

MemphisMechanic

Unreliable Chainsaw Enthusiast
Local time
4:13 PM
User ID
14442
Joined
Nov 6, 2020
Messages
142
Reaction score
352
Location
Memphis, TN
Country flag
How do you alter timing without machine work?
As has been already said, by raising / lowering the ports after deleting the base gasket. Assuming you still have sufficient squish, of course.

In some saws it leaves quite a bit of power on the table. On some saws it comes quite a bit closer to a fully machined build.
 

Sloughfoot

Super OPE Member
Local time
2:13 PM
User ID
26879
Joined
Jun 7, 2023
Messages
350
Reaction score
741
Location
Norcal
Country flag
Hey everyone,

I have been around the forum almost daily for the last year, and I have been fixing, building, and restoring saws for longer. I have done a number of ground-up builds, small performance mods (muff mods, timing advances, base gasket deletes, carb mods, air filter mods, etc.). I have had a blast doing these stock-mod builds, but I am envious of the skill that many here have when it comes to port work. I initially wasn't too interested in ported saws, but an 034s from @drf256 changed my mind on that.

I have been acquiring knowledge and tools for porting my first saw, and I think I'm at the point where I'd like to try it. I don't have access to a lathe or machining tools, nor do I have a right angle grinder, so my first port job will likely be a pretty simple one.

I have this grinder, a full selection of double cut burrs, diamond balls, polishing mandrels, etc. I have a timing wheel on a drill chuck as well.

I have a few good stock candidates for porting: Husky 266 and 272, Stihl 024 and 038m. I have additional OEM cylinders for the 266, the 024, and the 038M in case I totally mess up.

Which should I start with first, and what numbers/shapes/etc should I be working with?

Thanks for the help.
I saw these pneumatic grinders after I'd gotten my first Foredom. Is it working well for you?
 

amateurarborist

Active OPE Member
Local time
3:13 PM
User ID
30922
Joined
Jan 6, 2025
Messages
3
Reaction score
5
Location
Idaho
Agreed with others. Timing wheel is absolutely necessary. Pick whichever saw has the biggest diameter piston. Start by figuring out the stock timing numbers.

Then watch Tinman's basic saw porting videos on YouTube before doing anything. I've had great luck with his method. It will help you understand why everyone is giving the advice they are, and help you decide on your timing numbers. Be prepared to disassemble and reassemble a few times. Cut a little, reassemble and check timing, repeat. It's easy to go too far. Thousands of an inch of material removed are degrees of timing.

Delete base gasket, use motoseal instead. Raise exhaust roof a few degrees, lower intake floor a few. Maybe touch the transfers a little, but maintain max blowdown (yields torque). Make sure that you don't go enormous on intake/exhaust, because you would need a bigger carb, but ovalize the intake and exhaust by widening them. Make sure they still have a conical and not flat top and bottom or you will hang a ring and nuke the top end. Similarly, make sure to champfer and polish their edges a little. Polish the exhaust, leave the intake rough. Gut the muffler and make the exit about 60-70% the volume of the exhaust port on the head. You will notice significant gains.
 

Stump Shot

Disciple of Monkey's
GoldMember
Local time
4:13 PM
User ID
1377
Joined
Jun 5, 2016
Messages
32,268
Reaction score
203,961
Location
Northwoods of Wisconsin
Country flag
I have this grinder, a full selection of double cut burrs, diamond balls, polishing mandrels, etc. I have a timing wheel on a drill chuck as well.

I have a few good stock candidates for porting: Husky 266 and 272, Stihl 024 and 038m. I have additional OEM cylinders for the 266, the 024, and the 038M in case I totally mess up.

Which should I start with first, and what numbers/shapes/etc should I be working with?

Thanks for the help.
The 266 will be the easiest, it needs the exhaust port worked over mostly, squish is good usually as well as timing and compression.
 

jacktheripper

Papa Squat
GoldMember
Local time
3:13 PM
User ID
28875
Joined
Apr 5, 2024
Messages
252
Reaction score
590
Location
Wyoming
Country flag
It sounds like I need to do this 266 then. I actually have three - One nice stock runner, and two very nice project saws that will be ground-up restorations. I think I should just do a ground-up build and document it on here. I have watched some of Tinman's videos, but I am skeptical of taking anything of his as truth. Is there a good 266 porting thread, or recipe that somebody can point me to?
 

Stump Shot

Disciple of Monkey's
GoldMember
Local time
4:13 PM
User ID
1377
Joined
Jun 5, 2016
Messages
32,268
Reaction score
203,961
Location
Northwoods of Wisconsin
Country flag
It sounds like I need to do this 266 then. I actually have three - One nice stock runner, and two very nice project saws that will be ground-up restorations. I think I should just do a ground-up build and document it on here. I have watched some of Tinman's videos, but I am skeptical of taking anything of his as truth. Is there a good 266 porting thread, or recipe that somebody can point me to?
Look up Scott Kunz on YouTube and look for his how to video series on porting chainsaws, there's none better.
Start your build thread and let us know your numbers and capability's and we can try and work up a plan for you. Just trying to inject someone's numbers in doesn't necessarily work without all the other details that they have done, like machining etc..
 

MG porting

Pinnacle OPE Member
Local time
2:13 PM
User ID
6543
Joined
Jun 28, 2018
Messages
2,445
Reaction score
6,972
Location
Wa
Country flag
Hey everyone,

I have been around the forum almost daily for the last year, and I have been fixing, building, and restoring saws for longer. I have done a number of ground-up builds, small performance mods (muff mods, timing advances, base gasket deletes, carb mods, air filter mods, etc.). I have had a blast doing these stock-mod builds, but I am envious of the skill that many here have when it comes to port work. I initially wasn't too interested in ported saws, but an 034s from @drf256 changed my mind on that.

I have been acquiring knowledge and tools for porting my first saw, and I think I'm at the point where I'd like to try it. I don't have access to a lathe or machining tools, nor do I have a right angle grinder, so my first port job will likely be a pretty simple one.

I have this grinder, a full selection of double cut burrs, diamond balls, polishing mandrels, etc. I have a timing wheel on a drill chuck as well.

I have a few good stock candidates for porting: Husky 266 and 272, Stihl 024 and 038m. I have additional OEM cylinders for the 266, the 024, and the 038M in case I totally mess up.

Which should I start with first, and what numbers/shapes/etc should I be working with?

Thanks for the help.
Ms440 or 038 would be the easiest saw to learn how to port in my opinion for someone who has limited tools but I do highly recommend that you get the right angle makes a world of difference having one.
 
Last edited:

Basher

Pinnacle OPE Member
Local time
6:13 PM
User ID
552
Joined
Jan 16, 2016
Messages
1,321
Reaction score
4,319
Location
Canada
Country flag
What grit on the belt sander? Levels the base quickly.
 

amateurarborist

Active OPE Member
Local time
3:13 PM
User ID
30922
Joined
Jan 6, 2025
Messages
3
Reaction score
5
Location
Idaho
Ms440 or 038 would be the easiest saw to learn how to port in my opinion for someone who has limited tools but I do highly recommend that you get the right angle makes a world of difference having one.
Honestly I use a dremmel right angle attachment and it works OK. I also have had to grind the mandrel down on a regular dremmel chuck to get it to fit in a 2511 head. You can be creative and get it done cheap.
 
Top