[SPAM] RE: [SPAM] RE: [SPAM] Re: Pipe Life Questions

Keith Hoard khoard at midsouth.rr.com
Mon Feb 21 05:54:35 AKST 2005


How about taking it to a machine shop or auto repair garage and running it
thru their solvent tank?  I think the newest tanks are nothing more than
soapy water with ultrasonic sound run thru it??

 

 

 

Keith L. Hoard

Cordova, TN

khoard at midsouth.rr.com

 

 

 

  _____  

From: discussion-request at nsrca.org [mailto:discussion-request at nsrca.org] On
Behalf Of Buff Miller
Sent: Monday, February 21, 2005 8:51 AM
To: discussion at nsrca.org
Subject: [SPAM] RE: [SPAM] Re: Pipe Life Questions

 

Hey Bill,

 

How are you doing?

 

Good question.  I meant to put that info in the original message.  I'm not
sure just how many flights were on the pipe.  The way we like to put in
these parts; is "there were a ton of flights on it".   I'll be a little more
specific, at least two solid years.  I bought the engine and pipe from Earl
at the beginning of 2004 and flew it all last season.  Earl bought it brand
new in late 2002 or early 2003, I'm not sure.  But he put some serious time
on it in 2003 in preparation for the 2003 Nats.  He then continued to use it
for the remainder of 2003.  So, how many flights is that?  Your guess is as
good as mine, has to well over 500, probably a whole lot more, I really
don't know.

 

Since I started this thread I've been thinking a lot about solvents and
pipes, particularly the flow capacity of pipes.  I think I can make a strong
recommendation to everyone now and that is; baseline the flow capacity of
your pipe before you ever use it.  This can be done very simply by filling
it up with water and then timing how long it takes to empty itself.  Do this
several times, up to a dozen, to get an average.  Record this information in
a safe place so when you think your engines performance is beginning to
wane, do a flow test again and match the new rates against the old.  This is
cheap, easy way to know what you're dealing with.  Kind'a like what the big
boys do to know what the flow capacity of their automotive cylinder heads
is.

 

As far as solvents, last night I soaked the pipe in water.  Yep, another
Earl idea.  I tell you when the man speaks, I listen.  You never know, it
just might work. Anyhow today (it's raining outside anyway, so what else is
there to do) I plan to flush it with hot soapy water and watch to see what
kind of crud comes out.  Next, on the solvent list is; Mineral Spirits, then
maybe your Gumout, or Bob Richards paint remover, or ..

 

See you at the Beach!

 

Buff

 

  _____  

From: discussion-request at nsrca.org [mailto:discussion-request at nsrca.org] On
Behalf Of Bill Glaze
Sent: Monday, February 21, 2005 8:36 AM
To: discussion at nsrca.org
Subject: [SPAM] Re: Pipe Life Questions

 

Buff (and others who have had the same problem)
About how many flights did it take to get the pipe blockage that you folks
are talking about?  Obviously, it announces itself by degrading engine
performance, and I was curious about when to start looking for the problem.
One of my Hatori pipes had a lot of crud on the outside, and I cleaned it
with some Airplane Cleaner that I picked up at Advanced Auto Parts.  It took
several applications, but did a fair job of cleaning.  But--that's not the
same as the inside of the pipe.  When I was building engines, I had a 5
gallon pail of carburetor cleaner and I'm wondering if that stuff would do
any good.  It sure removed all the crud from a carburetor; while the race
engines never got all that dirty, I did do other stuff besides, and I saw
the carb cleaner work miracles.

Bill Glaze
P.S. Buff:  See you at Myrtle Beach!


Buff Miller wrote:



Hi Steve,

 

You're not too late.  I had the pipe in the PP for 24 hours with no ill
effects.  It did clean some carbon, as seen by chunks of carbon being
flushed out.  But did it clean it thoroughly?  I guess the engine will tell
me next time out.  Or, though I'm not quite ready for this; perform an
autopsy on the pipe.

 

Buff

 

  _____  

From: discussion-request at nsrca.org [mailto:discussion-request at nsrca.org] On
Behalf Of Steve Wiggin
Sent: Sunday, February 20, 2005 11:41 AM
To: discussion at nsrca.org
Subject: Pipe Life Questions

 

Be careful with the Purple Power on aluminum. If it's the same stuff I'm
thinking of, made by Castrol, I used some to clean my motorcycle wheel and
it pitted the aluminum rim! Hope this message is not too late.

 

Steve

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