Carburettor cleaning- what's best?

Ultra sonic cleaning is excellent and part of the answer. Wife's Christmas present perhaps, as it is great for jewellery. sub 60 note for a good one on e bay.

The other part is the 5% ethanol in regular petrol these days.

Try BP premium as at the moment has no alcohol. It certainly helped this yearwith a 8hp yamaha 4 stroke we have, along with a lesser pitched prop.
Best to avoid ethanol in outboard fuel as it absorbs moisture.
 
Yes I use one. Only really useful for setting carb jets correctly
Has anybody tried one of these glass sparkplugs 'colourtune' that we used to use 20 years ago?
It seems to me that there is a preponderance of owners with the same (or similar) problems and I've seen a lot of dosh being spent to no avail
Something is WRONG...
PS I don't have one, but I know someone who does.
 
Has anybody tried one of these glass sparkplugs 'colourtune' that we used to use 20 years ago?
It seems to me that there is a preponderance of owners with the same (or similar) problems and I've seen a lot of dosh being spent to no avail
Something is WRONG...
PS I don't have one, but I know someone who does.

I tried one years ago in my Herald, without much success. I suspect that it takes a lot of practice to identify the colours properly. With an even slightly over-rich mixture it also tended to soot up very quickly ... if your outboard is 2-stroke I suspect that would be an even bigger problem.
 
Cleaning a carb is really easy once you know how they correctly work, There are different jetting systems that work independently of each other. Once you work out what orifice leads to what it actually does its pretty straightforward. In a nutshell if your problem is within the first 1/5 approx. throttle the problem is in your slow/ pilot jet system ie tickover. If your problem is in mid / high range its associated with the main jet. There are a few exceptions to the rule but 99% of the time this is the case. I clean hundreds of small hp carbs and have an industrial ultrasonic cleaner but usually a good squirt with carburettor cleaner in appropriate places does the trick without the need for ultrasonic cleaning.
 
All really interesting stuff chaps. Didn't realise ultrasonic was a DIY job. I'll look into that. I've got a Colortune from the 70s, but it's too big to use in the small plug hole on the Tohatsu.
 
Cleaning a carb is really easy once you know how they correctly work, There are different jetting systems that work independently of each other. Once you work out what orifice leads to what it actually does its pretty straightforward. In a nutshell if your problem is within the first 1/5 approx. throttle the problem is in your slow/ pilot jet system ie tickover. If your problem is in mid / high range its associated with the main jet.

If only they were all like that! The DS carb has, as I recall, five jets (main, auxiliary, idle, power and accelerator pump) for its twin chokes and two or three air bleeds as well, There are passageways all over the place inside the body. Of course an outboard will have something a lot more tractable.
 
French complication. I bet it went well once set up correctly though. Lovely looking cars IMO.
If only they were all like that! The DS carb has, as I recall, five jets (main, auxiliary, idle, power and accelerator pump) for its twin chokes and two or three air bleeds as well, There are passageways all over the place inside the body. Of course an outboard will have something a lot more tractable.
 
Sparkie, what is the problem with the carb, tickover , rough running etc?
Yes all of that, the symptoms are those of a weak mixture, including racing at tickover occasionally. The frustrating part is I can get it running perfectly, all the usual tests, leave it 24 hours, come back to it and it runs like a pig again. Take it apart, clean it all again, all fine and dandy and then- yes it goes crook again. New fuel, filters everywhere, no difference. For the first 4 years or so it ran perfectly.
 
French complication. I bet it went well once set up correctly though. Lovely looking cars IMO.

Lovely to drive and goes like stink, but when the second choke opens you can almost hear the air rushing into the petrol tank. I had mine converted to LPG - more complication - which keeps the running costs a bit more reasonable.
 
I have a colourtune, but its only of use if the cylinder is firing and, as someone has mentioned, you need to adjust the mixture.
An alternative to aerosol carb cleaner is brake cleaner which I use as a universal solvent for all sorts of jobs. Cheap enough to dunk a twin-choke webber in to soak off gum after an hour or two. I don't have a compressor any more so use the spare tyre to blow through the jets.
The carb, btw, is off a 3.0 V6 Essex in a Scimitar.
 
Be careful soaking carbs in solvent. Neoprene needle valve tips melt with some solvents and also there are plastic jets in some outboard carbs that can become enlarged. I wish carbs were built the same as twin choke Webers .
 
Another one for sonic cleaner.I mend out boards for a living and have found that with the introduction of 4stroke engines the passage ways are so fine that it is the only easy way to clean.Fill the cleaner with degreaser for even better results.
 
It sounds like needle valve and/or float problem.

Both look ok, and I've cleaned the needle valve of gum etc, but it's spring loaded as you probably know. Is this likely to weaken over time so as to allow too much petrol in? If the float were cracked I think I would hear fuel sloshing inside, but maybe not. Would too high a fuel level give rise to these problems? I've always felt it to be too weak rather than too rich. Anyway thanks for all the advice so far.
 
Another one for sonic cleaner.I mend out boards for a living and have found that with the introduction of 4stroke engines the passage w
ays are so fine that it is the only easy way to clean.Fill the cleaner with degreaser for even better results.

Yes sonic cleaning seems to be getting the thumbs up, which is helpful. Cheers.
 
Sparkie, is the needle valve holder on the float steel? If so may need a little adjustment. I do know Mercury are having small carburettor problems and actually have changed manufacturers . I was having a chat with a friend and he showed me a box half full of Mercury /Tohatsu carbs changed under warranty.
 
Sparkie, is the needle valve holder on the float steel? If so may need a little adjustment. I do know Mercury are having small carburettor problems and actually have changed manufacturers . I was having a chat with a friend and he showed me a box half full of Mercury /Tohatsu carbs changed under warranty.

From memory yes it is. Interestingly, one of my affected friends (Mariner 5) bent the "arm" a bit and it improved matters greatly. (After he mistakenly filled it with diesel(!) he swears it's going better still............) I've not altered mine at all as I imagined that it was factory set and couldn't see how it could change. I also wouldn't know which way to go with the level. Higher or lower? So I've left it alone. My carb is a Keihin, but there's no model no on it anywhere.
 
had problems starting my 15 hp yamaha 4 stroke----tried carb cleaner ---no sucess---had it ultrasonic cleaned at d +r engineering walton marina ---perfect---touch wood---i always disconnect the fuel line from the outboard and run the carb dry---then use the remaining fuel in the tank for my strimmer/chainsaw---however the mechanic advised me to disconnect the fuel line from the tank to avoid stale fuel left in the line and that honda said not to use fuel more than 6 weeks old------regards lenten
 
Bending the float down will mean the float will not rise as high so less fuel in the bowl. The revs rising on your engine could be it is running out of fuel out of the float bowl. Obviously bending up will be the reverse. An inspection of your spark plug will let you know what's happening mixture wise.
 
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