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Tore into my engine last night, lots of carbon buildup i'd like to remove. Any tips from the group would be appreciated.
-Mark
80 GS850 well sorta....
How far are you tearing it down? I've used a wire wheel both on a bench and on the end of a drill. I wouldn't do it if I wasn't tearing it completely apart as it makes a mess.
Yea....be carefull you don't doo more harm than good.
LRRS EX 66
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factoryeffex
Non-chlorinated brake parts cleaner. Give it a minute or two to soak in....should pretty much just wipe off. Heavier areas will require a few attempts.
I suggest lightly coating everything with oil once you are done cleaning
Thanks guys, head and cylinder is off, pistons are still connected to the rods and attached to the lower end. I could remove them if nec..
-Mark
80 GS850 well sorta....
Wirelessly posted
GM top end cleaner.
http://www.ehow.com/list_7426582_haz...e-cleaner.html
drain bamage.
What's the difference between a bolt and a screw?
First you screw, then you bolt.
Brake clean seems to do the trick. Ill post before and afters if anyones interested.
-Mark
80 GS850 well sorta....
years ago, ya could take the air cleaner off, and pump spray a mist of water with one hand into the carb while you were keeping the engine revved with the other hand to keep it running
RandyO
IBA#9560
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A man without a gun is a subject LETS GO BRANDON
nedirtriders.com
Depends which hose you pull. You might pop a lean code eventually, but you'll obviously know why.
Of course, you have to be careful not to hydrolock the engine.
What's the difference between a bolt and a screw?
First you screw, then you bolt.
More progress... But i found a better method...
Head was a dirty whore
Put on some johnny cash gospel and some comet, water, and a brass brush...
Cylinders were way shiny...
Not any more....
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Last edited by Mvalenti; 07-26-13 at 07:24 PM.
-Mark
80 GS850 well sorta....
Exactly, might pop a lean or a low vacuum code, if you have to disconnect some vacuum controlled device (like an EVAP compontent) might trip that. But doing long term damage? Never heard of it and would happily do it to my car. Been a while since I last did, but it's on my to-do list. Lots of people seafoam modern cars the exact same way, except you let it stall out so the seafoam sits on the piston heads. Wait 10-15min and let it smoke.
The art isn't lost with the modern car crowd either. Water and Alcohol injection systems are pretty popular with the aftermarket turbo crowd to resist knock. One of the benifits people claim is that it keeps the cylinders clean. Now it's debated if there's a noticable benifit... but I think you get my point.
Btw, OP, those came out clean!
Last edited by aldend123; 07-26-13 at 07:11 PM.
nedirtriders.com
On my VW someone figured out that you could pull the temp sensor on the front of the intake manifold. Stuff a bit of vac or fuel hose into the hole, shim out with electrical tape if required, and use a basketball pump needle on the end. The needle creates a constriction small enough to draw seafoam but not big enough to throw a vac code.
No idea how throughly it cleans the intake valves though. Not well enough I suspect as my mileage has been falling off @ almost 100k.
My concern is that the t-stat sensor port is in the center of the manifold fairly close to the intake valves. I reason it is primarily cleaning the middle two valves while the outside two don't get much. ... But my moral was that you can do that even on these new-fangled modern engines.