Carbureted sleds are a dwindling breed. But if you’re like most snowmobilers you’ve likely “hung-on” to a few faves from the past that still employ the round slide Mikuni or other similar carb. If so, you likely know all too well how the ravages of time, lack of use, and today’s ethanol spiked fuel work together to create a green, hardened funk inside the float bowl and other fuel passageways. When it does, removing, dismantling and cleaning the carb and associated brass parts is the only way to get your scooter up and running again. Over the years, the shop monkeys here at OSM have tried virtually every off-the-shelf carb cleaner and chemical dip we could find, all with varying results. That is until we found our favorite blend of cleaning solutions at our local grocery store and our brass has never looked better.
I’ve been trying to clean my brass I use flour vinegar and salt in a change my blast into copper so I start using anything I can find to change it back lucky I went into your website I hope it changes my breath is hard for me because I don’t know how to read I try everything but it shows me on the email on the web also for cleaning copper but doesn’t do nothing for the brass I’m going to try that toilet stall and I hope it changes my grass back into the same color it was before so I can recycle and get more for my money thank you
I’ve been trying to clean my brass I use flour vinegar and salt in a change my blast into copper so I start using anything I can find to change it back lucky I went into your website I hope it changes my breath is hard for me because I don’t know how to read I try everything but it shows me on the email on the web also for cleaning copper but doesn’t do nothing for the brass I’m going to try that toilet stall and I hope it changes my grass back into the same color it was before so I can recycle and get more for my money thank you