Removing fossilized paper gaskets from Intake

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nomov8sho

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Hey all-

I figured I throw this out there in case it can help somebody else. I just finished removing the remains of the paper gaskets from my intake runners and Butterfly assemblies. My best guess is somebody had put them on with that spray-on gasket adhesive.

I started with a scraper- no dice.

Wire wheel- Nope, the gaskets seemed to be harder than the aluminum.

Soaking in brake cleaner, carb cleaner, parts cleaner- all showed some improvement but not much, and the fumes were not friendly.

Finally, out of desparation, I tried test spots of various other garage chemicals.

My best results were with P-B Blaster. It wasn't great, but it did soak in and let me lift most of the stuck areas pretty well with a razor blade gasket scraper. The areas around the bolts required some repeat applications and additional soak time. I spent about 15 hours on the job, all told. I'm guessing it might have taken 2 or 3 hours if I'd known the P-B Blaster trick from the start.

Of course, your results might vary, etc.

Hope this helps somebody out.

Thanks,
-Josh
 

AREA 91

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I try to get them off in big pieces with a fresh razor blade.

I also have a glass bead cabnet for back-up.:angelnot:
 

Airborne

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I am glad I read this post before doing some maintenance yesterday. Oil pump gasket was "fossilized". It cut the time down considerably.
 
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Oh man, this brings back bad memories of the few days I spent scraping intake gaskets a while back, WD-40, gasket remover, gasket scraper, ugh. What finally worked best was me taking a razor blade in hand and just being really careful and making sure I got under the gasket material, but still night after night of trial and error, makes it a hundred times worse when it's your daily driver.
 

thundersho

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I just did this and what a pain in the ass.... I just used a straight razor to remove and. Figures are sore but hey its done. what turned out to be just painting the intake turned out being gaskets and 3/4 of a 60k. love my car, love my car, love my car...
 

chrism3784

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Yep. I was just going to post that as I was reading. You beat me DIE GRINDER always works and makes a perfect surface for a new gaskets. It shaves of a microscopic amount of metal so don't go over it to many times.
 

Airborne

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These work great too. Also, you have to be careful about removing metal, but removes less than sand paper. I have these at home. I wish I had brought them out with me. Not really that expensive to buy, but I didn't have my die grinder out here. But the PB Blaster worked in a pinch.

http://www.levineautoparts.com/3mro3meyebrd.html
 

itwonder

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These work great too. Also, you have to be careful about removing metal, but removes less than sand paper. I have these at home. I wish I had brought them out with me. Not really that expensive to buy, but I didn't have my die grinder out here. But the PB Blaster worked in a pinch.

http://www.levineautoparts.com/3mro3meyebrd.html

I've been using those 3M Bristle discs for years, and I concur that they are very good. I'm also a big fan of the 3M Roloc Surface Conditioning Discs, both Blue (fine) http://www.levineautoparts.com/3mrolsurcond2.html and maroon (medium) http://www.levineautoparts.com/3mrolsurcond1.html
 

chrism3784

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Today had this exact problem, the fossilized paper gasket between the oil pump and block. What I used is of course a die grinder with super grit sanding block just to get it started, then a medium grit pad and a scraper going back and forth. Pain in the ass but worked.
 

Airborne

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Today had this exact problem, the fossilized paper gasket between the oil pump and block. What I used is of course a die grinder with super grit sanding block just to get it started, then a medium grit pad and a scraper going back and forth. Pain in the ass but worked.

You wouldn't think it, but removing that old oil pump gasket is a B**CH!
 

itwonder

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NAPA/Permatex gasket remover can be helpful too.
 

SHOZ123

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If it's carbonized oven cleaner will work great and not harm the metal.
 

Off Road SHO

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EZ-Strip paint stripper works well if you have it laying around. Also used old brake fluid one time on an old chevy.

Tom
 

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