Jackjcc
Participating member
- Location
- Twin Cities
Don't take what @fordf150 said negatively. He was just pointing out the advancement of woods ported saws. I don't think he was intending to offend you.Wow, Sorry for sharing.
Thanks for your input
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Don't take what @fordf150 said negatively. He was just pointing out the advancement of woods ported saws. I don't think he was intending to offend you.Wow, Sorry for sharing.
Thanks for your input
there was no offense meant by that...just pointing out where we were and how far we have come at calling something a woods port....epoxied intakes were a thing for cookie cutters just a few years ago and now randy is doing them on a woods ported saw.Wow, Sorry for sharing.
Thanks for your input
Mastermind saw works figured out with the help of tree monkey that the intake needed to be raised after porting on the ms661c. the gains from that are unreal, but you have epoxy in your saw...bit odd for some to call that a work saw. Seems more on the experimental hot saw side to some.Love the 372's. That one looks like a runner. And what pray tell is an epoxied intake?
that is my thoughts on it too. something about a big chunk of epoxy jsut laying in the bottom of the intake doesnt feel right but time will tell. Im sure there will be some issues down the road....there are bound to be at least a few saws that the epoxy didnt quite bond good enough and with the heat cycles, gas, and oil will come loose. At least thats my thoughts on it.Mastermind saw works figured out with the help of tree monkey that the intake needed to be raised after porting on the ms661c. the gains from that are unreal, but you have epoxy in your saw...bit odd for some to call that a work saw. Seems more on the experimental hot saw side to some.
Thanks for clearing that up.there was no offense meant by that...just pointing out where we were and how far we have come at calling something a woods port....epoxied intakes were a thing for cookie cutters just a few years ago and now randy is doing them on a woods ported saw.
My testing has shown the exact opposite. The 661 needs that fuel to make the most power. I'm getting as much as a 35% gain from the 661. I'm not seeing that in the saws with the raised intake. I'm not here to start a battle, but thought I'd share my findings.Mastermind saw works figured out with the help of tree monkey that the intake needed to be raised after porting on the ms661c. the gains from that are unreal, but you have epoxy in your saw...bit odd for some to call that a work saw. Seems more on the experimental hot saw side to some.
I don't know. I've tested both and the difference is huge. The saws with raised intakes are only seeing about 20% gains when 35% is possible.Wasn't the point of the raised intake to increase charge velocity? In a way increasing fuel?
It certainly does.But does it have a pop up?