Now I have to be the shop manager and be sure everything that needs to be done with my carbs, gets done. Last night I removed the butterflies and now have my carbs completely broken down so the bodies and bowls can be dipped in carb dip.
I saved the parts from each section in their own zip-lock baggies so they'll go back in their original body. I'm wondering which of the loose parts should I have dipped as well? It will probably be a problem to keep those pieces separated at the shop and some of those jets are tiny so perhaps they are too small? What should I do by myself?
Should I expect that the passages will be cleaned of scale build-up after the dip or do I need to do something else to assure open passages?
Seeing as there's no rubber parts involved, what kind of dip is the best for cleaning? The ultrasound cleaning I had done on my last set of carbs at a bike repair shop used ultrasound with "simple Green" and water, no other chemicals. I remember the machinist at the auto shop used a powerful petroleum distillate but no ultrasound. What's my best cleaning going to come from?
Thanks!
I saved the parts from each section in their own zip-lock baggies so they'll go back in their original body. I'm wondering which of the loose parts should I have dipped as well? It will probably be a problem to keep those pieces separated at the shop and some of those jets are tiny so perhaps they are too small? What should I do by myself?
Should I expect that the passages will be cleaned of scale build-up after the dip or do I need to do something else to assure open passages?
Seeing as there's no rubber parts involved, what kind of dip is the best for cleaning? The ultrasound cleaning I had done on my last set of carbs at a bike repair shop used ultrasound with "simple Green" and water, no other chemicals. I remember the machinist at the auto shop used a powerful petroleum distillate but no ultrasound. What's my best cleaning going to come from?
Thanks!
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