Cleaned TB per instructions, now engine is locked
#21
#22
#24
Mike, nobody is talking about induction cleaning as far as I can see. They are talking about TB cleaning.
#25
What Camdisco24 said. I'm the original poster & I am talking about the throttle body cleaning procedure which I linked to in numerous places in this thread.
#26
read this: https://landroverforums.com/forum/sh...ad.php?t=19664
#27
Join Date: Apr 2006
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I realize that the thread stated clean a t/body but it was sounding more like people were really talking about cleaning the induction cleaning based on the amount of liquid people were using.
When cleaning a t/body, you only spray a 1 to 2 second spray into the t/body both in front and back of the plate, then let it sit. If a little leaks out, just put a paper towel under the t/body throat to catch that small amount.
After letting the spray sit for 5 minutes or so, use a tooth brush, scrub the entire area to loosen up any baked on residue then wipe out as much of the old mess/fluid with a paper towel.
Before restarting, clean the idle solenoid, for D2's, then go to start the engine, turning the key till it starts and don't pump the throttle because the engine will most likely already be flooded.
This is the correct way to clean a t/body, with no exceptions.
When cleaning a t/body, you only spray a 1 to 2 second spray into the t/body both in front and back of the plate, then let it sit. If a little leaks out, just put a paper towel under the t/body throat to catch that small amount.
After letting the spray sit for 5 minutes or so, use a tooth brush, scrub the entire area to loosen up any baked on residue then wipe out as much of the old mess/fluid with a paper towel.
Before restarting, clean the idle solenoid, for D2's, then go to start the engine, turning the key till it starts and don't pump the throttle because the engine will most likely already be flooded.
This is the correct way to clean a t/body, with no exceptions.
#28
#30
Cleaning the tbody didn't cause the explosion, it was the 16oz or so of TB cleaner that was in the combustion chambers when I started the motor after following explicit instructins on how to jack up the wheel to make sure the cleaner goes in the intake and "dont be cheap, use the whole can." Liquids do not compress, and against my better judgement I followed the instructions anyway, as I thought that you all probably knew something I didn't. I turns out that is not the case in this scenario, and my blown engine is the result.
I think that mikes recent post on this thread on how to clean the TB would have netted distinctly different results, namely I wouldn't have just completed a motor swap. Notice how it doesn't include dumping copious amounts of fluid into the intake all at once on a non running engine and then starting it.
That being said, I should have used better judgement than to follow what seemed to be bad advice anyway. Had the instructions said to dump a can of gas, or kerosene or water for that matter into the TB and start the engine I would have thought that was insane, but the instructions are very compelling and TB cleaner didn't seem as crazy at the time. It is crazy though, don't do it.
I think that mikes recent post on this thread on how to clean the TB would have netted distinctly different results, namely I wouldn't have just completed a motor swap. Notice how it doesn't include dumping copious amounts of fluid into the intake all at once on a non running engine and then starting it.
That being said, I should have used better judgement than to follow what seemed to be bad advice anyway. Had the instructions said to dump a can of gas, or kerosene or water for that matter into the TB and start the engine I would have thought that was insane, but the instructions are very compelling and TB cleaner didn't seem as crazy at the time. It is crazy though, don't do it.