Author
|
Message
|
46yblock
|
|
Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 11 Years Ago
Posts: 1.2K,
Visits: 7.8K
|
I did a search and nothing came up. Perhaps this has been covered before. I've been trying to use Chem Dip (Berryman's) to clean up some carbs but they are not coming out well. Often there is a blackish deposit that looks bad. Maybe there is another process after ChemDipping they need to go through, or maybe I am leaving the parts immersed too long. Are ultrasonic cleaners the method of choice these days? I heard some time ago Harbor Freight had an ultrasonic unit. Anyone using it? Mike
Mike, located in the Siskiyou mountains, Southern, OR 292 powered 1946 Ford 1/2 ton, '62 Mercury Meteor, '55 Country Squire (parting out), '64 Falcon, '54 Ford 600 tractor.
|
|
|
Rex59F100
|
|
Hitting on all eight cylinders
Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 12 Years Ago
Posts: 14,
Visits: 73
|
Nope you're doing it right...but the cleaners just are not as good as they used to be. Both the Berrymen Chem Dip and the Gunk Solder(sp?) Seal don't work to well these days. I've been tempted to glass bead my carbs but I'm affraid I won't be able to clean out the passages well enough when I'm done. I haven't tried an ultrasonic cleaner, closest I got was the dishwaser , but it might be worth a shot. JMO Rex
|
|
|
MarkMontereyBay
|
|
Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 5 Years Ago
Posts: 733,
Visits: 3.8K
|
DO NOT USE YOUR DISHWASHER...trust me, I know from experience and the bill from the local appliance dealer. The grit and crud tend to take out the pump in the dishwasher at the worst, the least is that it will puke up the goo on your dishes and glassware for a long time. Google ultrasonic cleaners that you can build yourself. Environmentally much better and do a good job clearing the small internal passages.
57 Black Tbird 312/auto
|
|
|
46yblock
|
|
Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 11 Years Ago
Posts: 1.2K,
Visits: 7.8K
|
Rex, I have used glass bead, but like you indicated, it gets everywhere in the carb. Was able to get it all out after a LOT of washing and blowing. Looking for a better way. Mark, aside from messing up your dishwasher, did it clean the carb? We need a new dishwasher, and maybe I could move the old one out to the barn if it cleans the carburetors. Hey maybe it would do a head . Today I tried immersing for a couple hours in chem dip, then pulled it out and washed with water/brushed with gas, then redid it two more times. It isnt a good end result. I'm sure the carb would work fine, but it looks like crap.
Mike, located in the Siskiyou mountains, Southern, OR 292 powered 1946 Ford 1/2 ton, '62 Mercury Meteor, '55 Country Squire (parting out), '64 Falcon, '54 Ford 600 tractor.
|
|
|
MarkMontereyBay
|
|
Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 5 Years Ago
Posts: 733,
Visits: 3.8K
|
Nope...the dishwasher deal was a complete cluster F&%k. Dishwashers can digest some soft food stuff but not things like grit or broken glass, etc. Dishwasher's have a miniscule little tin blade under a screen that is supposed to grind up this stuff in the water flow before it goes through the pump. Putting car parts in them is like pouring sand down your carb on a running engine...instant death. I did heat my Sanderson headers for the 65 Galaxie FE to 350 degrees in the oven and then painted them with high temp stuff while the wife was at work. I got away with that and the headers still look good.
Mark
57 Black Tbird 312/auto
|
|
|
geraldchainsaw
|
|
Hitting on all eight cylinders
Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 11 Years Ago
Posts: 19,
Visits: 162
|
i've used what they call a vapor blaster on my 94's, and thats stripped down to the last bolt, never had any problems, its the same machine u would use with course or heavier type blasting material, only its a very fine grit, just run a air hose thru after your done, jerry
|
|
|
aussiebill
|
|
Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 4 Years Ago
Posts: 1.8K,
Visits: 11.4K
|
MarkMontereyBay (6/3/2010) Nope...the dishwasher deal was a complete cluster F&%k. Dishwashers can digest some soft food stuff but not things like grit or broken glass, etc. Dishwasher's have a miniscule little tin blade under a screen that is supposed to grind up this stuff in the water flow before it goes through the pump. Putting car parts in them is like pouring sand down your carb on a running engine...instant death. I did heat my Sanderson headers for the 65 Galaxie FE to 350 degrees in the oven and then painted them with high temp stuff while the wife was at work. I got away with that and the headers still look good.
MarkMark, hope the good wife doesnt read this part! did you take the cake out first/
AussieBill YYYY Forever Y Block YYYY Down Under, Australia
|
|
|
MarkMontereyBay
|
|
Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 5 Years Ago
Posts: 733,
Visits: 3.8K
|
Bill,
To be fair, I am the chief cook and bottle washer in our house. Have been for all 30 years of marriage and raising four kids. She does cast a sharp look now and then at my antics but she likes the food and doesn't say much. I took off from home when I was 16 and learned very quickly that if you want to eat regularly, well and cheaply, get a job washing dishes in a decent restaurant. From there I moved up through the ranks learning the fundamentals and developed a keen interest in cooking.
Mark
57 Black Tbird 312/auto
|
|
|
46yblock
|
|
Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 11 Years Ago
Posts: 1.2K,
Visits: 7.8K
|
geraldchainsaw (6/5/2010) i've used what they call a vapor blaster on my 94's, and thats stripped down to the last bolt, never had any problems, its the same machine u would use with course or heavier type blasting material, only its a very fine grit, just run a air hose thru after your done, jerryThat sounds like a glass bead blasting cabinet, or is it different?
Mike, located in the Siskiyou mountains, Southern, OR 292 powered 1946 Ford 1/2 ton, '62 Mercury Meteor, '55 Country Squire (parting out), '64 Falcon, '54 Ford 600 tractor.
|
|
|
geraldchainsaw
|
|
Hitting on all eight cylinders
Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 11 Years Ago
Posts: 19,
Visits: 162
|
u could b right, i worked at fords near heat treat, in the heat treat dept they had a heavy duty type blaster that used some black type material, it cleaned up heat treated steel and many other things, but the other cleaner or blaster was in the fixture dept and used a finer blasting material for fixtures made out of plastic, plaster, aluminum etc, very fine blasting material white in color, and thats the one i used for my 94's, they also sell the small cleaning cabinets at Harbor Freight < which i myself don't like, but if u have a good compressor they work fine for cleaning wheels etc, just my opinion, but like i said, i've cleaned my 94's with no problems and i run 2 deuces on my 51, maybe i;ve answered your question wrong, are u talking more about a chemical cleaner??????????, if so forg;et what i've said, jerry
|
|
|