(quoted from post at 21:24:25 03/10/21) Does anybody have any ideas for getting the rust and crap out of all the little orifices and needle seats of a carburetor? A small wire brush and pick just isn't small enough, and the needles aren't seating right because of it. This is off a Case VAO, if that makes a difference.
So... I was just thinking about this again recently. The last time I did a carb, it was the carburetor on my 2N. I didn't have any issues with the seats being rusty, but that thing does have some small orifices; which I ran through with guitar strings.
I made one mistake at the beginning of the project. I tried to clean it in gasoline, which didn't work so well. I actually came here to the forums (in the Ford 9N, 2N, 8N group) and was told... duh... gas goes through there all the time, you need a solvent different than gas. So, I dutifully went to NAPA and bought a 1 gallon carb cleaner "kit"... which looks like a metal one gallon paint can. It's filled with carburetor cleaner solvent, and has a little wire basket to put the parts in for soaking.
So, I learned about carburetor cleaner and guitar strings back then.
In the mean time, I've learned, through other projects and threads here in the forum that I've initiated for those projects, that "Milkstone Remover" that I have in my barn's milkhouse for cleaning milking equipment (it's phosphoric acid) is an excellent rust remover. You can buy it at Tractor Supply as Dairlyland brand "Sterosol".
I've soaked rusty parts in milkstone remover and had them come perfectly clean. The caveat there is... if the rust has severely pitted the metal... you WILL lose whatever metal has been converted to rust. For instance, small, riveted brake parts, like the parking brake actuator on our daughter's 2008 car... the ring of metal formed by riveting? Gone... it was all rust... and hence the acid "removed" it all. The actuator came perfectly clean, but fell apart.
Same thing for snap rings and stuff like that. If they are completely rusty? Gone.
So, if you use phosphoric acid, be ready to have judgement passed very, very quickly, as to whether your parts are rusted beyond "cleaning" or not.
The latest wrinkle in this whole thought process is, ultrasonic bath cleaners. They are now available on Amazon for reasonable prices.
I recently bought one for my "home office"... since I'm an electronics designer by trade, and I sometimes have to clean solder flux off of small circuitboards that I've soldered on. Ultrasonic baths have been used forever to clean small parts in the electronics industry. Also the jewelry industry.
Now that I have this little cleaner... I wonder how well it would do, filled with a charge of carburetor cleaner... with carburetor parts put in the little basket and "cleaned" for a while.
Anyway... good luck... that's a brain dump of what I've learned about carburetor and small parts cleaning in the last few years.
