halfmoa
Ensign
- Joined
- Aug 19, 2011
- Messages
- 955
Has anyone experienced problems created by the decarb process aside of the smoke screen? I'm wanting to decarb my 1972 Johnson 65hp and I've read one experience where the carbon removed was more or less sealing a head gasket and the engine subsequently failed. I'm aware that if the carbon was plugging the head gasket it would've failed sooner or later but here's my deal:
My wife's grandfather owned the boat for the last 35 or so years and gave it to her. He was in the USMC and performed preventative maintainence on jet engines so it's very mechanically sound. I'm performing routine maintainence, repairs, and a general rejuventation of worn out aspects and decarbing the engine is next on the list. The wife has been paranoid every time I make an adjustment or repair that something will go wrong and she'll never hear the end of it from her family. (she's right about that) I asked gramps if he ever decarbed the engine and got a puzzled response in return so I'm sure it's never been done. The lake they frequented is a pretty slow paced putt-around-and-look-at-the-pretty-houses lake so I'm sure there's plenty of carbon in there. If I decarb the engine in an effort to improve performance and fuel consumption and something goes wrong guess who'll never live it down? ME!
So, anyone experienced problems created by the decarb process?
Thanks everyone!
halfmoa
My wife's grandfather owned the boat for the last 35 or so years and gave it to her. He was in the USMC and performed preventative maintainence on jet engines so it's very mechanically sound. I'm performing routine maintainence, repairs, and a general rejuventation of worn out aspects and decarbing the engine is next on the list. The wife has been paranoid every time I make an adjustment or repair that something will go wrong and she'll never hear the end of it from her family. (she's right about that) I asked gramps if he ever decarbed the engine and got a puzzled response in return so I'm sure it's never been done. The lake they frequented is a pretty slow paced putt-around-and-look-at-the-pretty-houses lake so I'm sure there's plenty of carbon in there. If I decarb the engine in an effort to improve performance and fuel consumption and something goes wrong guess who'll never live it down? ME!
So, anyone experienced problems created by the decarb process?
Thanks everyone!
halfmoa