Screwloose
Well-Known Member
I use a combination of many ideas above, but with small inclusions and deviations, but everyone has their methods that suit them, and work. Its never failed me in carb bodies, and i’ve done a few in my years.
Hope this helps someone out somewhere.
With a needle of sorts pick out any dirt from the screw heads, give a non worn screwdriver bit a couple of hammer knocks in the screw to make sure it seats as good as you will ever get it, this sometimes also loosens dirt holding the screw in. Use a small ratchet with bit, holding tight and square to the screw. If it is all too tight then tighten the screw very slightly, then loosen very slightly. Put some lubricant on it and loosen again slightly, lubricant again and tighten in again to get the top threads on body and screw lubricated. If tight go slightly up and down using lubricant each time. I really take my time in this stuff as the consequences are severe. Infact just recently i had to strip all the seized callipers on my car and used the back and forth with lube and slight heat to success.
If I cannot loosen at the beginning i’ll use my precision blowtorch on the body around the screw. If i strip the screw head its hacksaw or dremmel, although i find the dremmel kicks back on you, and runs in the opposite direction from what you expect ( maybe my imagination) but it can take a bite and plough into a job.
Then its slot or jis bit, again tap down and use a ratchet with bit or angled screwdrivers. The torque you get using a ratchet or angled screw driver is far superior than standard. If i remember right the last time i pulled the vmax carbs out i did not need to split the banks at all by using the angled screwdrivers. There is one bowl that appears not to come off, but if you look at it carefully and turn it slightly it does come away (just). Its the gap of an elephants ball hair that clears the bowl from the body. I have to admit though if you have the patience to soak the screws in a lubricant like loosall the day before, then it definitely gives you an edge, even if it just gets under the screw head it still helps.
On bigger stuff, as above, if i strip everything on either stainless, mild steel or alum, then tig weld a nut ontop of the screw.
Hope this helps someone out somewhere.
With a needle of sorts pick out any dirt from the screw heads, give a non worn screwdriver bit a couple of hammer knocks in the screw to make sure it seats as good as you will ever get it, this sometimes also loosens dirt holding the screw in. Use a small ratchet with bit, holding tight and square to the screw. If it is all too tight then tighten the screw very slightly, then loosen very slightly. Put some lubricant on it and loosen again slightly, lubricant again and tighten in again to get the top threads on body and screw lubricated. If tight go slightly up and down using lubricant each time. I really take my time in this stuff as the consequences are severe. Infact just recently i had to strip all the seized callipers on my car and used the back and forth with lube and slight heat to success.
If I cannot loosen at the beginning i’ll use my precision blowtorch on the body around the screw. If i strip the screw head its hacksaw or dremmel, although i find the dremmel kicks back on you, and runs in the opposite direction from what you expect ( maybe my imagination) but it can take a bite and plough into a job.
Then its slot or jis bit, again tap down and use a ratchet with bit or angled screwdrivers. The torque you get using a ratchet or angled screw driver is far superior than standard. If i remember right the last time i pulled the vmax carbs out i did not need to split the banks at all by using the angled screwdrivers. There is one bowl that appears not to come off, but if you look at it carefully and turn it slightly it does come away (just). Its the gap of an elephants ball hair that clears the bowl from the body. I have to admit though if you have the patience to soak the screws in a lubricant like loosall the day before, then it definitely gives you an edge, even if it just gets under the screw head it still helps.
On bigger stuff, as above, if i strip everything on either stainless, mild steel or alum, then tig weld a nut ontop of the screw.