[AT] Jim Dandy Question
Larry Goss
rlgoss at insightbb.com
Thu Sep 16 10:05:13 PDT 2010
You're right on! H. L. The present economic factors on these engines will blow your mind. I no longer work on any 2-cycle engines for that reason. Generac parts (pressure washers, generators, etc) only have complete carburetors available -- no repair kits, but the whole carburetor is so cheap that replacing it is a "no-brainer." But Kohler carbs are in the $180 to $225 price category WHEN YOU CAN FIND THEM. So boiling out and rebuilding a carburetor is about the only way to go. I invested in a "real" parts washer this summer, and I make use of it almost every day. I "stole" some commercial solvent made specifically for carburetors, so between the Safety-Kleen Corporation (makers of my parts washer) the commercial carburetor solvent, and some judicious use of BrakeKleen, I'm starting to rehabilitate items I used to just replace on those old machines.
Larry
----- Original Message -----
From: "H. L. Staples" <hlstaples at mcloudteleco.com>
Date: Thursday, September 16, 2010 10:37
Subject: Re: [AT] Jim Dandy Question
To: "Antique tractor email discussion group<at at lists.antique-tractor.com>" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
> Bob sounds like the needle valve (float valve) is not a letting
> gas into the
> carburetor. Probably have to open the carburetor up and do a
> good cleaning
> job.
>
> A few weeks ago the Honda engine on my son's pressure washer
> would run if a
> small amount of gasoline was sprayed into the throat of the
> carburetor when
> that fuel was burned the engine would die. No fuel through the
> needle valve
> was what I found.
>
> After a complete disassembly of the carburetor and finding every
> passage was
> clogged by the wonderful unleaded gasoline. (the unit had been
> setting for
> about two years without being run.) I called the local Stens
> distributor and
> with real sticker shock found that I could buy a brand new
> carburetor from
> Honda for less than $16.00. Did that and now the engine
> runs like a champ.
> The shock was that for the most part Honda engine parts are
> normally priced
> high high. Needle, seat and gasket from the normal parts list
> cost more.
>
> Enough said the engine should have been stored with Stable (sp)
> in the fuel.
>
>
> Should not be a biggie for you to remove and clean the
> carburetor as most of
> the older units are tough, and pretty easy to work on.
>
> H. L. Staples
> McLoud, Oklahoma
> USA=and proud of it.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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