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RE: Removing tarnish from inside carb bowl

To: "'John L. Walker'" <up497@freenet.victoria.bc.ca>
Subject: RE: Removing tarnish from inside carb bowl
From: Peter Zaborski <peterz@merak.com>
Date: Tue, 12 Aug 1997 14:58:35 -0600
Cc: "'TR6 List'" <triumphs@Autox.Team.Net>
You might try Gunk Carb cleaner and a very very fine steel wool.

Peter Zaborski
76 TR6 (CF58310 UO)
Calgary AB Canada


> -----Original Message-----
> From: John L. Walker [SMTP:up497@freenet.victoria.bc.ca]
> Sent: Tuesday, August 12, 1997 2:57 PM
> To:   The Collective Wisdoms
> Subject:      Removing tarnish from inside carb bowl
> 
> 
> I took the TR4 for its first extended run yesterday, ran like a charm!
> 
> Except...  when I arrived I popped the hood to see if anything was 
> steaming or smoking, instead I was greeted by a leaking float bowl!
> eeks!
> 
> Anyway, it appeared that the needle had been stuck open (or the float 
> stuck down, it didn't happen again after I dismantled everything and 
> rubbed oil over the mating surfaces.
> 
> But, is there any way to properly remove the built up tarnish that is
> on 
> all the brass pieces?  The service manuals suggest that I only use
> clean 
> gasoline to bathe all the pieces.  I'm not sure if this will do much, 
> because they've been bathing in clean gasoline since I got the car :(
> 
> I have at my disposal:
> a nylon 'wire-brush', both toothbrush-style and moto-tool
> some Brasso
> some solvent
> a regular wire brush, and a brass one (somewhere)
> Super-Clean!! (tm) gasoline :)
> oil, grease, etc.
> Nevr-Seez 
> Honing Compound (green stuff, for sharpening steel implements)
> 600 grit sandpaper
> 
> Can I use a combination of the above to clean things up?
> 
> Should I lubricate the moving parts with anything?
> 
> Thanks...
> -Malcolm
> 
>     Too many rocks and not enough sand. 

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