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Guest
Guest
I want to add an update to the wintergreen oil use for the carb to airbox rubbers. I found in my garage today a large baggie that contained 4 smaller baggies each with one rubber boot that was soaked in the wintergreen oil/xyleen thinner concoction.
I had soaked them overnight and then placed each one in a quart sized sealable plastic bag. The date I put on the bags was 9/28/2015. Now 2+ years out, the rubbers are as hard as a frozen hockey puck.
That surprised me as they had been treated and then sealed in an airtight bag, but I guess it just shows that the re-newing is only a temporary thing and will likely need to be redone occasionally.
Hope this is a help to somebody.
Rubber, as used in hoses, gaskets, tires and so on, is not a material. It is a mixture of materials. The predominant material in those products is one or several polymers that are also called rubber. The rubber polymer provides a flexible molecular lattice to which other chemicals are added. That rubber mixture must be cured to provide dimensional stability needed in the rubber product. Typically, 1/3 to 2/3 of a rubber mixture are the added chemicals. Books can be written on how rubber mixtures deteriorate with age, heat, light and other chemicals.
My guess is that the boots are made from a relatively inexpensive type of rubber, without a lot of attention how the boots will age. GS motorcycles are now at least 30 years old. Those boots have been exposed to a lot of heat, hydrocarbon fumes, UV light and flexing. With enough time and money, a rubber specialist could design and mold 100-year boots. They would cost too much to make sense on a machine that will probably not be on the road more than 15 years.