mercifiknow
Well-known member
Carb cleaner eating through my gloves. Suggestions? Preferably not a baseball mitt dexterity type. [emoji23]
Sent from my iPhone using Garage Journal
Sent from my iPhone using Garage Journal
Try using super heavy duty degreaser from harbor freight in the ultrasonic for carb cleaning.Getting one Father’s Day. Trying to determine the solution. Was going to get Simple Green Aircraft and do the appropriate concentration. Don’t want my carbs messing up the finish
I don't have an ultrasonic cleaner I just use a soaking container. First I use copper wire to poke through the jets so the Pine-Sol can get in any jets fully plugged. I then dis-assemble jets/needles one at a time and leave multiple carbs attached so as not to lose settings. I don't feel a need to break down a carb further than jets/needles most of the time. I use Pine-Sol full strength on brass pilots and steel metering needles with no bad results. On the carb bodies (zinc die-cast or pot metal) I use a 50/50 solution diluted with water because I've found the full strength to sometimes begin dissolving the pot metal (zinc die-cast) on some components like the float bowl drain plug. When that happens it will leave a silver stain on your fingers so now you know it's eating the metal. It doesn't seem to happen with the carb body itself, just some of the other components after soaking for a few hours and you never know when to expect it.The 50/50 solution, to me, is a safer bet to leave the components soaking for a few hours. Just pull the components now and then, wash off after checking your fingers for silver residue, and inspect. If it's spotlessly clean you're good to go (wash off thoroughly with water), if not clean enough just drop back in to soak for another hour or three. I always hit the washed/cleaned parts with some brake cleaner before assembly to displace any water left after a blast with compressed air. Hope this helped someone.Ronin,
My carbs have varnish and trash. I’m spraying cleaner in the places where the I can’t see. Are you using Pine-Sol as the solution in the UC or as a stand alone in a container? I’ve seen it used in both ways, sounds like in a container.
You are saying that the metal will not change color? I will go out and look regardless.
Used to work with MEK everyday at work along with other nefarious chemicals. It dissolved almost everything. Was at a place using highly concentrated Nitric acid and it looked like they wore oven mitts over oven mitts. Amazing how much, and fast, we have “progressed” as a Society in the last 150 years.I have 11 mil nitriles, fit and look like the "medical" gloves but way more durable. I also have a couple sets of Butyl gloves that are pretty much impervious to anything you throw at them, and fit pretty good (not like electricians gloves!!), but they were spendy. Neoprenes are good for hydrocarbons but feel like those electricians 2.5KV specials... You want the best, go Viton, but hold on to your wallet... I think I gave $150 for my last set. (I used to work hazmat, so yeah, your gloves were determined by what deadly s#!t we were sticking our fingers into!)...
I used to show exerpts from that teaching hazmat awareness... drove home the point "Stay Back"...A researcher spilled 2 drops of organic mercury on the back oh her gloved hands , she followed all the protocols for emergency cleanup, it got through the glove . She was a world expert on safety procedures, she wrote the protocols herself for industry.
Solvents easily get through our cheapy gloves, we just don't notice. Your hands sweat in those gloves, that can form an ionic bridge and convey the solvent through.