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| #Post#: 71647-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Titanium wrist pin | |
| By: Chainsawrepair Date: May 4, 2016, 12:00 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I know folks have tried other wrist pin materials to save | |
| weight. Is that the reason for the new Titanium wrist pins? | |
| #Post#: 71652-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Titanium wrist pin | |
| By: Gatekeeper Date: May 4, 2016, 6:23 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| That's the only reason I can think of. | |
| #Post#: 71656-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Titanium wrist pin | |
| By: Gatekeeper Date: May 4, 2016, 7:04 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| That guy has some cool stuff. Just not sure it's worth all of | |
| the expense. | |
| #Post#: 72484-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Titanium wrist pin | |
| By: Chainsawrepair Date: June 28, 2016, 7:32 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Had some old saws checked the other day and one was over 14K in | |
| the cut in 8x8 aspen or poplar and one set very rich on first | |
| cuts was over 13K in the cut. I always wondered as things happen | |
| to fast to watch on a handheld tach clamped on. Not bad for a | |
| big saw. | |
| http://dominantsaw.com/collections/performance/products/hollowpoint-titanium-wr… | |
| What they say. | |
| Reducing rotating weight is only one part of faster | |
| acceleration. Trimming down reciprocating weight is the other. | |
| An engine's reciprocating mass accelerates and comes to a stop | |
| twice per revolution. You don't want a saw spinning north of | |
| 13,500 RPM to do any extra work. That piston is coming to a halt | |
| 27,000 times a minute! Dropping few grams from equation adds up | |
| fast and has a direct impact on the performance of your saw. | |
| The hard numbers: If you drop 7g by switching to Hollowpoint Ti | |
| Wrist Pin, your saw does almost 450 lbs less work per minute in | |
| the cut. Over the life of the saw, your internals will be way | |
| less stressed. | |
| These are racing parts with a shorter life than the OEM | |
| equivalent, and therefore sold with no warranty. They are, | |
| however, very high quality and will stress your saw less due to | |
| lighter weight. | |
| Should fit all 12mm wrist pin saws, even those not listed. Pin | |
| is ~35.5mm long. Some shortening of the pin may be needed to | |
| equal the length of your OEM wrist pin and fit your saw. Grind | |
| from the outside edge in toward the center of the hollow, in a | |
| rotary motion, and sand/smooth in a similar way as not to have | |
| outward facing burrs. | |
| #Post#: 72485-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Titanium wrist pin | |
| By: Gatekeeper Date: June 28, 2016, 9:14 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| It is very hard to watch a tach in a cut less than a second. | |
| #Post#: 72490-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Titanium wrist pin | |
| By: NathanielVansickle Date: June 29, 2016, 12:12 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| lighter rotating mass has always been a priority in high rpm | |
| engines, would think on saws that would be even more important | |
| based on the rpms and limited size of bearings/journals. | |
| #Post#: 74320-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Titanium wrist pin | |
| By: oldpro Date: November 7, 2016, 5:26 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I started experimenting with titanium race saw parts over 25 | |
| years ago. Like all metals titanium is available in different | |
| alloys and grades of strength. I used the highest strongest | |
| grade of titanium available to experiment with. | |
| I made some titanium wrist pins,and counterbored them for | |
| minimum weight,the ti wrist pins weighed almost exactly half | |
| that of a stock pin. Not knowing how strong they were I put 2 | |
| into a couple of our shops demo saws(virtually new),an 064 Stihl | |
| and a 2095 Jonsered,then sent them both out with fallers who | |
| ran them for 10 hours a day for a week,then brought them back.I | |
| was happy none broke! But on teardown they were both severely | |
| worn,more than any pin I've seen. | |
| Titanium is about half the weight of steel and extremely | |
| strong,BUT titanium is not nearly as hard as some steel | |
| alloys,and quality wrist pins are made of tool steel,very hard | |
| material. I looked into chrome plating them but it's not | |
| possible with titanium. | |
| Therefore I only consider ti wrist pins for racing,not for | |
| modified work saws. | |
| Among other racing parts I used it for, I designed and built 3 | |
| titanium race cranks with full circle counterwieghts(For high | |
| high crankcase compression ratio) and longer stroke,in these the | |
| titanium is ideal. | |
| Reciprocating weight can be saved by lightening the piston or | |
| running 1 piston ring,which many Pro competitors do... | |
| #Post#: 82009-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Titanium wrist pin | |
| By: Chainsawrepair Date: March 28, 2018, 11:17 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Just read this on the Ti pins on their website. Nope not for me | |
| at all. | |
| How To Blow Up Your Saw With A Titanium Wrist Pin | |
| Posted by Bill Lockwood at Feb 12, 2018 | |
| The short answer: Install One! | |
| Dominant Titanium Wrist Pin | |
| However, with careful observation, and a pledge to yourself and | |
| your saw not to gamble, a Dominant Hollowpoint Wrist Pin will | |
| "wow" your friends and impress your neighbors. | |
| Here's what we send out with our wrist pins: | |
| These are racing parts with a shorter life than the OEM | |
| equivalent, and therefore sold with no warranty. Despite a | |
| very-noticeable performance increase, they will fail after 35 | |
| (or less) tanks of fuel in a ported 372xp running our piston. | |
| They are, however, very high quality and will stress your saw | |
| less due to lighter weight. | |
| #Post#: 82010-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Titanium wrist pin | |
| By: Chainsawrepair Date: March 28, 2018, 11:18 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| more | |
| Reducing rotating weight is only one part of faster | |
| acceleration. Trimming down reciprocating weight is the other. | |
| An engine's reciprocating mass accelerates and comes to a stop | |
| twice per revolution. You don't want a saw spinning north of | |
| 13,500 RPM to do any extra work - that piston is coming to a | |
| halt 27,000 times a minute! Dropping few grams from equation | |
| adds up fast and has a direct impact on the performance of your | |
| saw. | |
| The hard numbers: If you drop 8g by switching to Hollowpoint Ti | |
| Wrist Pin, your saw does almost 450 lbs less work per minute in | |
| the cut. Over the life of the wrist pin, your chainsaw's | |
| internals will be less stressed. Hollowpoint ti pins weigh about | |
| 9g, which is about half the weight of our Wiseco pins (about | |
| 17g). These run up to 0.0015" undersized for power gains, but we | |
| have found differences of a thousandth of an inch in all the | |
| manufacturers pins. | |
| Failure. In our experience, the way these fail is the DLC | |
| coating on the pin wears, losing dimension inside the wrist pin | |
| bearing. This causes galling of the titanium, which eventually | |
| overheats and destroys the wrist pin, sending the roller | |
| bearings through the transfer ports, which, at 15,500rpm, will | |
| then �pin� the piston to the cylinder. It�s a very destructive | |
| failure. So, listen to your saw, set a limit to how much you run | |
| it before checking the internals, and change out the wrist pin | |
| early. | |
| Fits 372 and some others with no modifications. Will fit all | |
| 12mm wrist pin saws, even those not listed. Pin is ~35.5mm long. | |
| Some shortening of the pin may be needed to equal the length of | |
| your OEM wrist pin and fit your saw. Grind from the outside edge | |
| in toward the center of the hollow, in a rotary motion, and | |
| sand/smooth in a similar way as not to have outward facing | |
| burrs. | |
| #Post#: 83977-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Titanium wrist pin | |
| By: trappermike Date: January 1, 2019, 12:44 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I taperbore wrist pins and that's enough. I don't make claims of | |
| 15,000 rpm as this is meaningless,what counts is the rpm's the | |
| saw turns in the cut under ideal conditions,my tests showed a | |
| strong 100cc hotsaw under full load cutting at around 11,500. I | |
| tach my hotsaws in testing. The pipes are designed for peak | |
| power at the peak rpms they actually turn in the cut. | |
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