Should I clean carbs?

slawosz

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I have 2 outboard motors, one 3.5 hp for boat, one 2hp for tender. Both 2 stroke. Both running fine. I wonder if I should give carbs proper clean before season starts, or just don't touch them (this was my first season with outboards)?
 
I cleaned mine and learned a lot in the process, and gained confidence in how these things work. (I didn’t dismantle any valves, just a dip in a little ultrasound bath, dry & refit.)
I’m not great with engines but it is a baby step.
 
What do you mean "proper clean"? I would not dismantle the carbs, if that is what you mean by proper clean. Provided that the engines run ok, I would drain the carbs to make sure there is no water or dirt at the bottom of the chamber, (should be a drain screw) put fresh fuel and test run the engines.
 
Most carburetors will have a drain plug on the float bowl. Definitely worth draining the bowl in case of fuel left from last use. The petrol evaporates leaving mostly oil. Flush a bit of new fuel through. ol'will
 
Worth familiarising yourself with removing the float bowl.
A squirt of carb cleaner while it's off perhaps?
 
The most important engineering lesson you can learn: If It Ain’t Broke, Don’t Try To Fix It.
This!!!!!

If they're running fine, the best way to flush the carbs through and decrud everything is to use the engines.

I recently had my old faithful 2T engine stolen and had to replace it with a 4T. With the 2T, I was fanatical about running it dry after use, as it avoids any number of problems. AIUI, it's less important with the 4T, but I'll still keep on doing it. I flush it by running it in fresh water when I put it away, so turn the fuel on, start it and turn the fuel off lets it run long enough to wash the salt out.
 
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