Re: Float adjustment
Posted: Mon Apr 24, 2017 1:51 pm
I am quick to install new floats when the existing floats are questionable. Sure, you can adjust old floats to whatever level works, but my experience has been that keeping the old floats right, with or without regularly diddling with the float level is hard to accomplish. I believe that heavy floats can and do give you less 'headroom' for adjustment.
If you install new floats, and it doesn't look like you needed them, well, it's not that hard to pull out the new floats and put them back into your spares stock, and stick the old floats back in.
In a similar vein, I always keep a new set of coils in stock. Old coils are another thing that I have 'chased' and seemingly corrected by narrowing the plug gaps, only to have the problem crop up again. Two new Bosch coils are expensive, but to my reckoning are more expensive to the psyche trying to make the old ones work.
I understand how satisfying it can be applying my brain to a problem, thus saving a significant chunk of money. On the other hand, if I'm wrong, then the specter of having a dead airhead way too far away from home to walk it, and with non-existent cell phone coverage, is something that I don't ever want to see myself doing again.
Sermon ended!
Ken, preachy in Oklahoma
If you install new floats, and it doesn't look like you needed them, well, it's not that hard to pull out the new floats and put them back into your spares stock, and stick the old floats back in.
In a similar vein, I always keep a new set of coils in stock. Old coils are another thing that I have 'chased' and seemingly corrected by narrowing the plug gaps, only to have the problem crop up again. Two new Bosch coils are expensive, but to my reckoning are more expensive to the psyche trying to make the old ones work.
I understand how satisfying it can be applying my brain to a problem, thus saving a significant chunk of money. On the other hand, if I'm wrong, then the specter of having a dead airhead way too far away from home to walk it, and with non-existent cell phone coverage, is something that I don't ever want to see myself doing again.
Sermon ended!
Ken, preachy in Oklahoma