I ran two early steel fin Fox .15s yesterday. They were donated to the Knights of the Round Circle, and needed extensive cleaning - Crock pot, scrub brush, etc.
I "tweaked" one of them with a bit of bypass and crankshaft flow clean-up (no timing changes) and polished the crankshaft and crankpin bearing surfaces, the other is stock. The cleaned up one ran 13,800 the stock one 13,500 both on 15-25-3 fuel and a Rev-up 8x4 prop. Pretty good for an ancient design like that!
The tweaked one has much better compression, and will hold rpm within about +/- 25 rpm in a rich 2-cycle, and can hold near peak indefinitely. It actually did a 2-flip start ..... once.
The other one is much harder to start, but also runs stably. It is clearly pretty worn out as it "bleeds" a bit of fuel out the nose of the crankcase and compression is noticeably "leakier".
The tweaked one's crankshaft runs very slightly warm, so it is probably still too tight. The other one runs cool as it should, but I guess the leakage is the price you pay for that.
Neither one hot restarts worth a hoot, total lack of hot compression.
I plan to dig out a Cox Medallion .15 for some comparison running. (Guess what I am putting my money on!

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We got a Flying Clown with one of the engines (Thanks Barry Baxter!), so that is the "goat" I plan to do flight testing on. Eventually, the "winner" will go in a Jr. Nobler.