jtexas
Fleet Admiral
- Joined
- Oct 13, 2003
- Messages
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Re: Like It Never Ends: Carb Issues
Re: Like It Never Ends: Carb Issues
HOLD EVERYTHING!
Screw the idle jets in tight, and don't back 'em out. That is definately not an "adjustable slow speed mixture" screw.
yup, if a mechanic finds a crack like that, he just reaches back off the shelf and adds "one new carburetor" to your invoice.
The 1978 carbs are ok for sure. I can't speak for late-model engines though. Some of my car engine parts (throttle-body for example) specifically mention a teflon coating that can be damaged by carb cleaner.
Unless the manual for your specific motor says the carb is coated, my advice is soak it (metal parts only) in the harshest carb cleaner you can find, like B-12. If it is coated, I'd still soak it but in something a little kinder and gentler.
Re: Like It Never Ends: Carb Issues
Ok, backed the idle jets out a bit..
HOLD EVERYTHING!
Screw the idle jets in tight, and don't back 'em out. That is definately not an "adjustable slow speed mixture" screw.
I do have a manual, and while it is very helpful, it is also very lacking in day to day experiences. ...doesn't really get into details on how to fix.
yup, if a mechanic finds a crack like that, he just reaches back off the shelf and adds "one new carburetor" to your invoice.
I've read that we should not soak our carbs because it strips some factory coating off of the body.
The 1978 carbs are ok for sure. I can't speak for late-model engines though. Some of my car engine parts (throttle-body for example) specifically mention a teflon coating that can be damaged by carb cleaner.
Unless the manual for your specific motor says the carb is coated, my advice is soak it (metal parts only) in the harshest carb cleaner you can find, like B-12. If it is coated, I'd still soak it but in something a little kinder and gentler.