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Quick question on engine cleaning
I have a Super Tigre G 90 that has a few miles on it and needs to be cleaned on the inside and outside. I plan on using the antifreeze method. No need to go into this method as there's plenty of info already on the forums.
A couple of questions: 1. I understand you must not put any plastic rings in the antifreeze as this will eat them. So, what parts should be disassembled and not put in the crock pot? I heard the carb is one. Any others? 2. To get max cleaning on the "inside" of the engine, should I completely disassemble the engine or just take the cylinder head and back plate off? Any other suggestions would be appreciated. If the engine will be disassembled, I will use the Sport Aviator article link listed below as it seems to make good common sense and has good detail for the beginner trying this. http://www.masportaviator.com/ah.asp...&ID=24&index=0 |
RE: Quick question on engine cleaning
I personally won't use antifreeze. The stuff is nasty from a health standpoint, and cooking it overnight in a crock pot is adding a lot of carciagins to the air you breath. I used to own an lapidary store and some of my customers used it in their rock saws for a coolant and lube. The spray off the blade though was like misting it into the area where they were sawing and the skin contact wasn't healthy either. Last, the stuff is sweet to the taste and your pets love it, one time as it will kill them.
The Dawn Power Cleaner from the grocery store does an equally good job, and you can wash it down the drain when you are finished. It is ilegal to flush antifreeze down the drain or down the sewer any place I've lived in the last 15 years. That clean up article is a very good one. In your case as you have an old work horse engine, not a crashed one, I would order up a set of bearings and replace them while you are going through the trouble. Also, if you have gaskets between the back plate and the crank case, head gaskets, O ring on the carb to crank case seal, then it would be advisable to replace these at the same time. Old gaskets are already flattened once, and the tend to stick to one surface or the other and at times both, so chances of breaking one are high. Also a head gasket needs to be replaced each time you pull a head. Send us some photos, before and after. Have fun Don |
RE: Quick question on engine cleaning
Simple green works good, soak the really dirty parts for an hour or two and scrub with toothbrush. And its biodegradable, George
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RE: Quick question on engine cleaning
http://www.goddards.com/html/productCategory.php?cat=7 Top left, lotion, toothbrush, done in 5 minutes. Amazing stuff. Only thing it doesn't touch is black baked on carbon deposits, but the brown stuff comes off, and removes years of oxidation. Inside cleaning = soak it, run it.
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RE: Quick question on engine cleaning
Dawn Power Dissolver...
Cheap, easily obtained, and washes off... |
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