ProfessorExperimental
Aristocrat
- Thread Starter
- #41
Air measuerer bits after much engine degreaser × brushing.
Still quite some varnish to go before OCD satisfaction, but realistically this is more than adequately clean.
I should be totally happy with this. The bearing doesn't turn but really, does it need to? It obviously hasn't done for ages and I can't see a flat spot...
But no. I had to go and get 2 different types of carby cleaner "to see if I could do better". Not Airflow Sensor Cleaner, mind, Carby Cleaner. Full strength.
The grime just hosed straight off with the spray. It was amazing. Like something off an infomercial. But then...
This is the dumbest photo I've ever taken. My fingers were already burning at this point, but I wanted to document what the Nulon Carby Cleaner did to my nitrile gloves for this PSA. As soon as I put my phone back in my pocket I ripped the glove off and ran my hand under the garden tap.
For at least 15 minutes. Until the burning sensation stopped. If you haven't experienced a chemical burn before I highly recommend continuing that trend. I'm assuming something in the carby cleaner depolymerises the nitrile and hydrogenated it because it felt a lot like a nitric acid burn, but I wasn't exactly going to grab a litmus strip to check the pH of the 20L bucket I was using to collect the water under my hand. Still felt tender the morning after.
I had also sprayed some into the metering barrel to free up the piston as well as into the injector ports in the fuel distributor, so the first thing I did after decontaminating myself was check those. Sure enough the paint on the control pressure port was melting into the shop towel. Ick.
My word it got the parts clean though. I basically changed gloves as soon as they were wet with overspray. Made a pile. Wrapped in shop towels and bagged em. Feel like a right ecovandal now thinking about that stuff sitting in landfill under what will one day be sports fields with a creek running through them...
OCD says yes. Common sense says no. Bearing rolls freely now.
Either Mercedes-Benz used to post-work their alloy castings, but only perfunctorily, or this has been handled by a previous Professor Experimental who was going to unleash the wild horseprs trapped within the mighty m116 with little more than a die grinder and a poor attitude to oil change intervals...