ranchdadmike
Pinnacle OPE Member

Dang that's a nice saw!
You should know! Thanks @you for the 262 hookup. Quite possibly the cleanest saw I own...wait, no, the second cleanest..wonder where the cleanest is?
Dang that's a nice saw!
I respectfully disagree. Yes stock muffler is better at stock rpm but if you run a ported muffler at stock rpm it’ll be slower. Too fat.
Then you are not comparing apples to apples, scientific method states 1 control variable can only be tested one at a time. I saw turning 13,500 will run different then a saw at 12,500, if the goal to test the speed in the cut rpm must be the same.
That would be like setting a ported saw to stock saw rpm from the manufacturer. You are leaving alot on the table.If you start changing more then 1 variable how do you know which has caused the increase or decrease?
Beat me to it lolIf you tune both saws to 13.5 and the ported one is too fat and looses power by being fat, then it makes the comparison pointless.
Be like building a motor for your car that's carbed and not jetting it accordinglyIf you start changing more then 1 variable how do you know which has caused the increase or decrease?
If the only thing you changed between cuts was the muffler opening, and tuned for fastest rpm in the cut, there are no other variablesI certainly agree that testing in the cut would be best to see which produces more power, if booth are tested by the same person, but that won't tell you that the muffler alone is the difference in what you find, if the carb is changed it now has a role in the findings
Sure it wouldI certainly agree that testing in the cut would be best to see which produces more power, if booth are tested by the same person, but that won't tell you that the muffler alone is the difference in what you find, if the carb is changed it now has a role in the findings
Not true. My 395 cuts faster at 13.5 then at 14Just stating how scientific method works, how do you know that the difference is the muffler and not the carb if you change booth at the same time? A saw turning a higher rpm should cut faster then a slower one, don't think that is the argument here, how big is to big on the outlet is the question as I understood it. More fuel should equal more power to a certain point.