Ultrasonic cleaning - a cautionary tale
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RogerE
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Ultrasonic cleaning - a cautionary tale
I had the carbs on my S2 ultrasonically cleaned this week and they looked great. However, the guy that did them called me a day later and said that he had found some small brass balls (2 mm and 4mm) in the tank afterwards. I said I wasn't aware of them as a component of my carbs, but hang on to them all the same...…
When I put the carbs back on today, as soon as I turned on the fuel tap, petrol gushed all over the engine! The cleaning had dislodged the small, 2mm brass ball that seals what seems to be a redundant outlet just below brass pipe where the fuel enters (see attached picture). It had also detached a larger, 4mm brass ball near the choke that must perform a similar function. I have no idea why these seemingly redundant features are on the carbs, does anybody know why? Anyway, if you do get your carbs ultrasonically cleaned, examine them very carefully after!
When I put the carbs back on today, as soon as I turned on the fuel tap, petrol gushed all over the engine! The cleaning had dislodged the small, 2mm brass ball that seals what seems to be a redundant outlet just below brass pipe where the fuel enters (see attached picture). It had also detached a larger, 4mm brass ball near the choke that must perform a similar function. I have no idea why these seemingly redundant features are on the carbs, does anybody know why? Anyway, if you do get your carbs ultrasonically cleaned, examine them very carefully after!
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ACS International
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Re: Ultrasonic cleaning - a cautionary tale
Hi,
I think you'll find the balls are to block drillings that are done in the manufacturing process
of the carb.
I guess you could refit the balls and smear araldite, or other epoxy glue, over the outside to seal the ball.
Hope this helps
Ade
I think you'll find the balls are to block drillings that are done in the manufacturing process
of the carb.
I guess you could refit the balls and smear araldite, or other epoxy glue, over the outside to seal the ball.
Hope this helps
Ade
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RogerE
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Re: Ultrasonic cleaning - a cautionary tale
Thanks for the reply - I am waiting for the Araldite to set now!
Roger
Roger
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Craig T
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Re: Ultrasonic cleaning - a cautionary tale
Not sure about Araldite and petrol together long term....could degrade.
I'd try and get a mechanical fix too (peen over the alloy) just in case the Araldite gives up.
Brilliant article by Dave Higgs in the resources section on carbs.

I'd try and get a mechanical fix too (peen over the alloy) just in case the Araldite gives up.
Brilliant article by Dave Higgs in the resources section on carbs.
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Hal
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Re: Ultrasonic cleaning - a cautionary tale
The Araldite will be fine. I made a temporary repair to my H2 tank where they commonly fail by the strap bracket, and it stayed put for years with no problem.
Last edited by Hal on Thu Apr 30, 2020 8:26 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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h2bchris
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Re: Ultrasonic cleaning - a cautionary tale
[quote="RogerE"]I had the carbs on my S2 ultrasonically cleaned this week and they looked great. However, the guy that did them called me a day later and said that he had found some small brass balls (2 mm and 4mm) in the tank afterwards. I said I wasn't aware of them as a component of my carbs, but hang on to them all the same...…
When I put the carbs back on today, as soon as I turned on the fuel tap, petrol gushed all over the engine! The cleaning had dislodged the small, 2mm brass ball that seals what seems to be a redundant outlet just below brass pipe where the fuel enters (see attached picture). It had also detached a larger, 4mm brass ball near the choke that must perform a similar function. I have no idea why these seemingly redundant features are on the carbs, does anybody know why? Anyway, if you do get your carbs ultrasonically cleaned, examine them very carefully after
When I put the carbs back on today, as soon as I turned on the fuel tap, petrol gushed all over the engine! The cleaning had dislodged the small, 2mm brass ball that seals what seems to be a redundant outlet just below brass pipe where the fuel enters (see attached picture). It had also detached a larger, 4mm brass ball near the choke that must perform a similar function. I have no idea why these seemingly redundant features are on the carbs, does anybody know why? Anyway, if you do get your carbs ultrasonically cleaned, examine them very carefully after



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Re: Ultrasonic cleaning - a cautionary tale
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RogerE
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Re: Ultrasonic cleaning - a cautionary tale
Thanks, great pictures mraxi, I'll check if those balls are still there!