Has any one sleeved there cyliner to a bigger size Piston

Not that I'm aware of, I follow the progress of such unique mods very closely. However don't let that stop you. Get plating that will handle chrome rings, as most of the rings I can find are chromed.

I'd be wary of the larger piston though. The pistons included in our engines are already fairly light compared to others, a larger piston will weigh more and your engine balance will change, most likely for the worse as (most of) the cranks are designed for 48cc engines. This means your piston assembly needs to be lighter, not heavier, to reduce vibrations and ride in a comfortable range.
 
My machinist is searching for a particular size steel sleeve
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There is a reason why cast iron is used for sleeving cylinders. It has something to do with wear and oil retention, but I forgot all the fine details.
 
If it were me I think I would hunt for a bigger, cylinder/head/piston head off of something else and then adapt it to your crankcase. Of course you'd need a similar stroke.

If you find a piston the right diameter it might not have the right pin to top of piston distance so that would have to be dealt with. With a bigger sleeve you'd have a bunch of port work to do, aluminum part of cylinder might weaken too much after being bored out.
 
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Answer #1 NO, Answer # 2 as follows .Punch out a block of billet aluminum add the desired bore cut in the intake and exhaust in the billet along with the bolt holes needed to attach exclude porting outside that needed to run the setup. It would be a good idea to cut a one piece crankshaft out of billet two piece connecting rod as well. Yeah better build a steel bracket to mount both the engine and the crankshaft after said and done.
 
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Bert Rod down in Miami is the only one I know of selling sleeved jugs.
And they ain't cheap.
Good stuff never is.
 
I hear he offers TRUE bigbore jugs, so he has apparently found something that works.
 
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