Author Topic: Carb rubbers  (Read 13164 times)

Offline UK Pete

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Re: Carb rubbers
« Reply #15 on: January 29, 2015, 10:45:28 AM »
Yes nos I have predictave text on
I will be home next week so can sort out then
pete

Offline AshimotoK0

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Re: Carb rubbers
« Reply #16 on: February 22, 2015, 10:44:53 AM »
Success !!


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y1kVSlLnR8k&feature=youtu.be

Bits of alumium in pics  are to raise level of softener ! Old plate is to stop water condensing into the softener bath. Glass vessel in water bath.
« Last Edit: February 22, 2015, 11:42:38 AM by AshimotoK0 »
“Alright friends, you have seen the heavy groups, now you will see morning maniac music. Believe me, yeah. It’s a new dawn.” Grace Slick, Woodstock '69 .. In the year of the Sandcast.

Offline Trigger

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Re: Carb rubbers
« Reply #17 on: February 22, 2015, 11:32:41 AM »
Whats for pudding Ash ;D

Offline AshimotoK0

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Re: Carb rubbers
« Reply #18 on: February 22, 2015, 11:42:04 AM »
Probably the pudding on the next hospital visit after they have pumped your stomach out.
This is a true story...  my mate drank a bottle of the 'Rose wine ' coloured diluted antifree he had left stored in a wine bottle under the kitchen sink. He was gardening and it was hot outside, his wife found it and asked him what it was so he drank a glass of it then realised ! After they pumped him out they gave him whisky as it evidently combines with  the the ethylene glycol in the anti-freeze..

He's got a 250 Superdream so you can imagine the type!

Ash
« Last Edit: February 22, 2015, 11:43:56 AM by AshimotoK0 »
“Alright friends, you have seen the heavy groups, now you will see morning maniac music. Believe me, yeah. It’s a new dawn.” Grace Slick, Woodstock '69 .. In the year of the Sandcast.

Offline mickharrow

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Re: Carb rubbers
« Reply #19 on: February 28, 2015, 08:12:05 PM »
Having read this post I was dreading trying to put on the carb rubbers today on my rebuild. The rubbers were supplied by David silver and went on with a hard push and wiggle so a very happy chappy now.

Offline AshimotoK0

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Re: Carb rubbers
« Reply #20 on: March 01, 2015, 08:17:21 AM »
Having read this post I was dreading trying to put on the carb rubbers today on my rebuild. The rubbers were supplied by David silver and went on with a hard push and wiggle so a very happy chappy now.

You won't have any problem with new ones or possibly a bike unused for yonks with low miles. It's the one's like my 750K0 that did 40k miles with  all of that heat and fuel exposure that harden up ( cause of many a broken alloy carb.  link plate  :(  ). Evidently, Vic World the sandcast resto guru in California checks the hardness of the airbox-to-carb 'rubbers' on any sandcast/K0 bike he looks at to buy, in order to gauge if the mileage is authentic.
One thing I am experimenting with as we speak in the CB250k ( and 400/4 as I remember) softening, as they have rubber to metal bonds which don't want to be weakened by the softening process. I have painted the interface of metal/rubber with industrial epoxy so that it stops ingress of the softener into the bonding, during the long softening process.

There are a lot of doubters on the other bike forums about my method but all I can say is I softened  a rock hard '69K0 inlet rubber 5 years ago and it is still soft but never run yet on the bike. I have a video of before and after will have to put on Youtube.  I am also trying to soften the little cover on the CB750 that covers the oil pressure switch. On other forums they bang on about using essential oils and glycerine, which may work too for all I know. However, I tackled the problem scientifically and asked someone who is a qualified industrial chemist and worked in the rubber processing industry for 20+ years and now operates from a university giving advice to industrialists, which he has done for about 18 years ( one of his main areas of work is looking at the crabby materials used in the caravan industry.. anyone who owns a caravan will know the havoc ingress of water into the structure has). We tried several methods whilst I was at his lab doing some other work in 2010 and we came up with the Refos stuff as the best method of softening nitrile rubber.

Having said all of this since 2010 you can now get brand new  pattern rubber parts for some bikes at reasonable cost but on the F2/K7 750's you are still talking a lot of money for Honda replacements. Plus some parts like the oil pressure switch on the 750 are rare or unobtanium.

I wouldn't try the softener out on cam chain/primary chain rollers or other internal parts though ( e.g. primary drive cush rubbers).

I have also got some other stuff I want to try for treating  the finish on other rubber components ( grommets, fork ear isolators etc) which are still soft but have had ozone exposure and develop a hard surface layer. I have some stuff I resurrected a colour laser printer with by removing the surface layer on it's paper feed rollers with 'rubber roller rejuvenator', so this is what I will try out.

Ash
« Last Edit: March 01, 2015, 08:28:15 AM by AshimotoK0 »
“Alright friends, you have seen the heavy groups, now you will see morning maniac music. Believe me, yeah. It’s a new dawn.” Grace Slick, Woodstock '69 .. In the year of the Sandcast.

Offline royhall

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Re: Carb rubbers
« Reply #21 on: March 01, 2015, 10:33:30 AM »
Hi All. The carb rubbers shown being softened in Ashley's witches brew pot are off my 750F2. When I sent them to him they were as hard as Bakelite and no way would the carbs go on. As I said earlier in the thread, I actually lifted the bike nearly off its stand trying to get the carbs on without success (didn't do much for my back either).

When they arrived back I gave them a good look over. They are now way softer than they were, and no visible cracks, splits, or surface bubbles nor any other form of reaction damage. They fitted easily one at a time onto the head, then with an almighty heave the carbs popped on (not forgetting to tape the front brakes on first). Not started the engine yet as I'm still waiting and waiting for Lancaster Bronze to send back my rechromed hose clips, but it all looks promising.

Anyway thanks for that Professor Ash saved me a fortune (if there's no air leaks when the engine starts of course). By the way the replacement F2/K7 carb rubbers I bought for my other F2 came from the States but were not genuine Honda just reproductions. And with the cost, P&P, import duty and the Fedex charge they cost £136 and you don't even get new clamp bands with them. Next Honda will be a K series as F2's are just too expensive to restore (if you can get the bits at all).

Will report back when the engine starts. Cheers.
Current bikes:
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Honda CB350F in Candy Bacchus Olive
Honda CB750F2 in Candy Apple Red
Triumph Trident 660 in Black/White
Triumph T100C
Suzuki GS1000HC
Honda CB450K0 Black Bomber
Honda CB750K5 in Planet Blue Metallic (Current Project)

Offline royhall

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Re: Carb rubbers
« Reply #22 on: March 31, 2015, 07:40:51 PM »
Sorry for the delay in reporting back. Had to wait 7 weeks for Lancaster Bronze to replate my carb clamps (Jeez). Anyway, there back now and the carbs went onto the softened rubbers a treat. Engine started and no air leaks. Mr Ashley you are a weird and wonderful genius. Cheers all.
Current bikes:
TriBsa CCM 350 Twin
Honda CB350F in Candy Bacchus Olive
Honda CB750F2 in Candy Apple Red
Triumph Trident 660 in Black/White
Triumph T100C
Suzuki GS1000HC
Honda CB450K0 Black Bomber
Honda CB750K5 in Planet Blue Metallic (Current Project)

Offline AshimotoK0

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Re: Carb rubbers
« Reply #23 on: April 02, 2015, 12:36:49 AM »
Don't try softening the K0 airbox to carb 'rubbers' . Tried to soften 4 from a '69 K0 and they came out rock hard after a full night's immersion at >70 deg C. Think they are made of Polyurethane not rubber. Good news is that the funny grommet cover thing on 750 Oil pressure switch softens OK. I remember having chemical analysis of the polymer types on K0 carb "rubbers" done in 2010 and was told the K0 airbox 'rubbers' were PU then. Seems that the softener makes them harder !! K0 carb to head 'rubbers' are nitrile rubber, as are later K7/F2 versions, so they are fine.

Ash
« Last Edit: April 02, 2015, 07:37:47 AM by AshimotoK0 »
“Alright friends, you have seen the heavy groups, now you will see morning maniac music. Believe me, yeah. It’s a new dawn.” Grace Slick, Woodstock '69 .. In the year of the Sandcast.

Offline royhall

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Re: Carb rubbers
« Reply #24 on: April 02, 2015, 06:31:22 PM »
Sorry Ash its all gone pear shaped.

Put the carbs on Tuesday night and started it. Sprayed some carb cleaner around the rubbers and all was well. Not touched it again until today. Tried to balance the carbs with the vacuum gauges today and they were all over the place, couldn't get it to steady out. Tried the carb cleaner again and now got leaks on 1, 3, & 4. Have even tried clear silicone on the rubbers to stop the air leaks but barely helped at all.

Any chance the rubbers have gone porous.

Bit stuck for where to go with this now. May be the final push I need to bin the PD's and convert to F1 carbs.

Anybody any bright ideas to help out as I would like to use the bike sometime this summer  ;D

Cheers all.
Current bikes:
TriBsa CCM 350 Twin
Honda CB350F in Candy Bacchus Olive
Honda CB750F2 in Candy Apple Red
Triumph Trident 660 in Black/White
Triumph T100C
Suzuki GS1000HC
Honda CB450K0 Black Bomber
Honda CB750K5 in Planet Blue Metallic (Current Project)

Offline AshimotoK0

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Re: Carb rubbers
« Reply #25 on: April 02, 2015, 10:17:13 PM »
Whoops doesn't sound good. I will do some tests on the one I softened in 2010 and report back but sounds like it may be a no no from what you are telling me. If you are having probs this early after fitting them it's going to be false economy in the long run. Did the clamps go slack at all?

Ash
“Alright friends, you have seen the heavy groups, now you will see morning maniac music. Believe me, yeah. It’s a new dawn.” Grace Slick, Woodstock '69 .. In the year of the Sandcast.

Offline royhall

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Re: Carb rubbers
« Reply #26 on: April 03, 2015, 10:36:17 AM »
Cheers Ash.

Have fitted the clamps with cap head screws so I can get a better purchase on them with a long t-bar key. Think they have tightened up okay, but its hard to tell for sure.

Just retested my other F2 that has new pattern part rubbers from Vintage CB750 in the states (at huge cost) and that's leaking as well. So I guess I wont be going down that route again. These rubbers are slowly turning into a bit of a nightmare.

Going to stick with the originals for now, may try a bit of Hondabond. Cant make matters any worse at this point.

Cheers, Roy.
Current bikes:
TriBsa CCM 350 Twin
Honda CB350F in Candy Bacchus Olive
Honda CB750F2 in Candy Apple Red
Triumph Trident 660 in Black/White
Triumph T100C
Suzuki GS1000HC
Honda CB450K0 Black Bomber
Honda CB750K5 in Planet Blue Metallic (Current Project)

Offline AshimotoK0

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Re: Carb rubbers
« Reply #27 on: April 03, 2015, 12:22:26 PM »
Give me a bit of time to do some experiments Roy. I will clamp one like yours to a K7 carb body, pressurize it and put a pressure Tx in line and plot the pressure decay plus spray the lot will leak detector.

Anyone know what the DS pattern K0 ones are like or the Cruzinimage ones . Or are they the same?

Ash
“Alright friends, you have seen the heavy groups, now you will see morning maniac music. Believe me, yeah. It’s a new dawn.” Grace Slick, Woodstock '69 .. In the year of the Sandcast.

Offline Sparrow1

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Re: Carb rubbers
« Reply #28 on: April 03, 2015, 05:56:11 PM »
I had huge issues with my K0 carbs regarding air leaks on all four. I could balance all 4 for 10 mins and then they go all pear shaped again. I then ordered 4 new K0 rubbers from Silver and I have never looked back, not withstanding the fact the earlier the 750 carb the less likely it will stay balanced. Even out of balance the bike performs fine, just isn't as sweet. Round about 500 - 1000 miles to stay in balance. I spoke to my chap who does this for me and remembers working on the K0/1/2 carbs back in '69 and on and keeping them in balance after sale new was a nightmare! My carbs are from Mr 750 Carb and completely overhauled hanging part exchanged them. Even then they needed balancing. The 4 way splitter is a pain too, a poor design and Honda quickly changed improved/changed the system. I am envious of the K1 set up, a much better system but, heh, that's first 'edition' bikes for you!
  Forgive me if I am out of order and missed the point but I would buy new rubbers if I were you.😉
  Nige. Ps, and good luck.

Offline UK Pete

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Re: Carb rubbers
« Reply #29 on: April 03, 2015, 06:08:56 PM »
i wonder if hi melting point grease would help seal them ?

 

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