Rick1956
10-03-2021, 05:20 PM
Hi folks,
I added a few different 110's to the garage recently, and I was pleased to find one of them had a factory exhaust pipe in perfect condition! Of course, the reason for the perfect condition was evident in other parts of the engine like the valves and combustion chamber: it was protected from rusting by the accumulation of oily carbon...
So my question to anyone that cares is, is there a way to clean out the inside of an exhaust pipe/muffler that actually works? I'm not fond of chemicals, but I'd try some sort of a "burn clean" if there was some good way to do it (read that 'without killing myself') that would work. Maybe just something simple like throwing it into a campfire for a while?
Maybe I'm just overthinking things... it's probably not worth the trouble if I ride it for a while and let it get really hot.
Thoughts? This exhaust valve might give you an idea of what the exhaust pipe likely looks like inside...
I added a few different 110's to the garage recently, and I was pleased to find one of them had a factory exhaust pipe in perfect condition! Of course, the reason for the perfect condition was evident in other parts of the engine like the valves and combustion chamber: it was protected from rusting by the accumulation of oily carbon...
So my question to anyone that cares is, is there a way to clean out the inside of an exhaust pipe/muffler that actually works? I'm not fond of chemicals, but I'd try some sort of a "burn clean" if there was some good way to do it (read that 'without killing myself') that would work. Maybe just something simple like throwing it into a campfire for a while?
Maybe I'm just overthinking things... it's probably not worth the trouble if I ride it for a while and let it get really hot.
Thoughts? This exhaust valve might give you an idea of what the exhaust pipe likely looks like inside...