I used to work on 025’s often. I’m at 230’ ASL and the most compression I’ve ever seen in one was 155# with a good tester on a cool dry day. Generally they ran 140-150.
All of the 42mm variants I ran through were dual port open transfers. The 42.5mm were quad port open. You might be able to see inside through the ex port and tell what you have.
Between the ambient temp and humidity and the extra 500’ of elevation, coupled with the fact that testers are generally not so accurate, I’m in the don’t fix what’s not broken camp. I’d bet on a cool dry day at a lower elevation, his # will come up.
People put too much emphasis on compression numbers. I’ve seen scored jugs make more compression than good jugs. Also, as stated above, dynamic compression is what matters more. At 13,000 rpm, there isn’t a lot of swept volume and there really isn’t time for much ring blow by. If the piston is smooth and the saw starts, run it.
Seems like the OP is enjoying cutting wood. Before needlessly spending money, I’d step up to a pro-style saw like an 026 and see if you like it better than your 025. You’ll need a different bar mount and chain though.
To the OP, if you want a spiced up 026/260 I know a guy. Would just take a few months to get to it.