A Carburetor is Specialized Work?! AMO?! WTF?!
Posted: Mon May 21, 2018 3:08 pm
I started taking carburetors apart (on motorcycles, cars,
boats and airplanes) when I was less than 10 years old.
Despite what TC might tell you, they are very very simple.
There is a float that goes up and down in the float bowl,
and it's usual failure mode is to sink.
The float is like a teeter-totter - at the other end, it raises
and lowers needles into a seat.
[img width=348 height=500]https://www.fix.com/assets/content/1544 ... ght-02.png[/img]
Common failure mode is that the needle and seat gums up
with residue (eg from mogas) and sticks.
You can tap a carburetor on the side with the handle of a
screwdriver to try to free a stuck float. Or you can use some
Seafoam which is a solvent and dissolves the gum in your
carb. Be careful using any solvent in your airplane because
it has much shittier seals and gaskets than your $99 lawn
mower. I have seen guys pour a gallon of lacquer thinner -
a very nasty solvent indeed - into their car gas tank, to try
to dissolve deposits in their fuel system. Not recommended
in a typical shitty piston certified aircraft.
Harrison Ford had a very expensive overhaul of his carburetor
by a shop with very fancy paper and they fucked it up and
he damn near died when his PT-22 Ryan was force-landed.
It was wrecked and he was injured, and the cause of the
accident was completely faulty maintenance, by a shop with
very nice paper.
Try to learn a lesson from that. Your carburetor cannot read
and does not give a shit about paper. Make it work correctly.
A carburetor is not much more complicated than your toilet.
As a pilot, you should have the intellectual capability to grasp
the functioning of both a carburetor and a toilet.
boats and airplanes) when I was less than 10 years old.
Despite what TC might tell you, they are very very simple.
There is a float that goes up and down in the float bowl,
and it's usual failure mode is to sink.
The float is like a teeter-totter - at the other end, it raises
and lowers needles into a seat.
[img width=348 height=500]https://www.fix.com/assets/content/1544 ... ght-02.png[/img]
Common failure mode is that the needle and seat gums up
with residue (eg from mogas) and sticks.
You can tap a carburetor on the side with the handle of a
screwdriver to try to free a stuck float. Or you can use some
Seafoam which is a solvent and dissolves the gum in your
carb. Be careful using any solvent in your airplane because
it has much shittier seals and gaskets than your $99 lawn
mower. I have seen guys pour a gallon of lacquer thinner -
a very nasty solvent indeed - into their car gas tank, to try
to dissolve deposits in their fuel system. Not recommended
in a typical shitty piston certified aircraft.
Harrison Ford had a very expensive overhaul of his carburetor
by a shop with very fancy paper and they fucked it up and
he damn near died when his PT-22 Ryan was force-landed.
It was wrecked and he was injured, and the cause of the
accident was completely faulty maintenance, by a shop with
very nice paper.
Try to learn a lesson from that. Your carburetor cannot read
and does not give a shit about paper. Make it work correctly.
A carburetor is not much more complicated than your toilet.
As a pilot, you should have the intellectual capability to grasp
the functioning of both a carburetor and a toilet.