nursecosmo wrote:
UFO wrote:
nursecosmo wrote:
UFO wrote:
nursecosmo wrote:
If Biodiesel is reaching areas of the combustion chamber without burning, such as behind an injector, it will polymerize into varnish. But then again, so can D2.
Yep, so I'm probably due a fast hard drive to burn that crap out.
Heat will make it worse once it is there. It just becomes shiny black coal. Even though BD is a good injector cleaner, it can't dissolve all compounds. A good petroleum based injector cleaner can soften some of the gunk and varnish that BD can't. I don't think that anything will clean behind your injector if it isn't seating properly.
The injectors have been pulled and cleaned. I am referring to the carbon buildup in the chambers left behind from so much incompletely combusted fuel due to the compression leak.
And I dispute your claim that a petroleum injector cleaner is any better at dissolving deposits than biodiesel. At least I've not come across one.
How can BD clean up it's own varnish?
"Like dissolves like."
Styrene dissolves polystyrene up until the molecular weight gets high enough where in which the polymer is then dissolving the styrene. If you want a "good" solvent system, mix phenol and cresol together in equal proportions and heat it to 100 deg. C. Not only will it dissolve or generally f-up anything on the engine that isn't metal, it will also dissolve human flesh down to the bone.
The answer is "because it can." ...and probably more correctly, "because it could." Since it's now a varnish/char combination, there may not be a lot of things out there that will magically remove it.
One practical solution would be use a paint stripper composition or something along those lines. Look at the ingredients list. Because it has the "good stuff" in it, they have to put it on there per environmental reporting regulations. Look for a product that contains "dichloromethane" or "methylene chloride" and try that. This isn't good for you, so don't take a big "hit" on it. Wear a respectable pair of gloves made of nitrile or thick rubber. Make sure the engine is cool since this particular chemical boils at around 100 deg F. It may be hard to find compositions with chlorinated solvents, so the ones containing mixtures of xylene, toluene, and other things in it may work. Because whatever you use will interact with rubber strongly, make sure you're only putting it where you want it. Considering it's substantial ability to f-up the paint on a car, you could try brake fluid. Pine tar remover could be a possibility too.