carburetor jet cleaner tool

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Pull a piece of wire out of a wire grill brush.

It's worked flawlessly on a friend's Honda scooter. Every year in the summer the carb needs to be taken apart at least once and I end up running a piece of wire down the jets to clean the gunk out.
 
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that is a welding tool. as far as car carburetter tool that one is NOT needed. unless i dont under stand what that tool is for.
 
Should work fine. It's just a re-purposed welding torch tip cleaner. You can pick them up at your local welding supply shop. Guitar strings work well also if you have one of those around.
 
I would not mechanically clean any jet. I used to use carb cleaner in the old days. Now they are using ultrasonic cleaners. If it was soft plastic that would be the safest thing I suppose if you need to jam something in it.
 
Tom is correct. It is a re purposed welding tip cleaning tool that you can pick up at a local welding store, Harbor Freight, or Farm supply type store for about $5 or less. Will not hurt anything, they won't ream out jets to a larger size (they are way to flexible).
 
I've cleaned many carburators, and never saw the need for such a tool. It's not as though crud in a carburator becomes crusty or adhesive.

The only purpose I could see for that tool is if you're trying to rejuvenate an old rusty carb on a car that sat outside for years.
 
Originally Posted By: oilboy123
I would not mechanically clean any jet. I used to use carb cleaner in the old days. Now they are using ultrasonic cleaners. If it was soft plastic that would be the safest thing I suppose if you need to jam something in it.
Yes, jets are sized by flow testing. The slightest scratch or nick changes the flow. John--Las Vegas.
 
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