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oil filter screen

hoodooman
honda305.com Member
Posts: 14
Joined: Sun Sep 19, 2010 6:43 pm

oil filter screen

Post by hoodooman » Tue Nov 30, 2010 7:03 pm

as i have my engine apart, i realized that the oil screen is severely damaged so i need to remove and/or replace it. does anyone run their 305 without this screen in place? i don't see how it could be that beneficial to run with the screen.

LOUD MOUSE
honda305.com Member
Posts: 7817
Joined: Mon Aug 15, 2005 8:23 am
Location: KERRVILLE, TEXAS

Re: oil filter screen

Post by LOUD MOUSE » Tue Nov 30, 2010 7:47 pm

hoodooman wrote:as i have my engine apart, i realized that the oil screen is severely damaged so i need to remove and/or replace it. does anyone run their 305 without this screen in place? i don't see how it could be that beneficial to run with the screen.
Last edited by LOUD MOUSE on Wed Dec 01, 2010 9:17 am, edited 1 time in total.

hoodooman
honda305.com Member
Posts: 14
Joined: Sun Sep 19, 2010 6:43 pm

Post by hoodooman » Tue Nov 30, 2010 8:20 pm

thank you for taking the time to make that ignorant reply. i came here to learn, not to be ridiculed. i wish the time spent on that reply would have been used to make a useful suggestion as to how to replace the damaged screen instead. that way, i could have learned something, and possibly someone else reading the post could have learned as well.

LOUD MOUSE
honda305.com Member
Posts: 7817
Joined: Mon Aug 15, 2005 8:23 am
Location: KERRVILLE, TEXAS

Post by LOUD MOUSE » Tue Nov 30, 2010 8:27 pm

HONDA made 30,000 plus of these engines and all had the screen.
Last edited by LOUD MOUSE on Wed Dec 01, 2010 9:19 am, edited 1 time in total.

hoodooman
honda305.com Member
Posts: 14
Joined: Sun Sep 19, 2010 6:43 pm

Post by hoodooman » Tue Nov 30, 2010 9:22 pm

god created millions of people with tonsils, but do we need them to live? no. some have them removed. as such, some parts of machinery are not vital to function properly. "i'd say ya be ignorant and need to learn." your poor, ignorant-ass grammer aside, yes you are right. that's why i'm here, jack.

mike horvath
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Posts: 209
Joined: Sat Apr 25, 2009 2:16 pm
Location: chino hills, ca.

Post by mike horvath » Wed Dec 01, 2010 12:24 am

OK...this isn't what we're here for. It's one thing to misunderstand a response, and a complete other to respond with name calling. Please not here at home. Thanks.

clarenceada
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Posts: 172
Joined: Sat Mar 21, 2009 4:02 am
Location: oregon coast

Post by clarenceada » Wed Dec 01, 2010 9:53 am

Hoodoo: Your comment about leaving things out reminds me of the second carburetor I ever worked on. When I was about 14 my mother had an old 52 Mercury Flathead car that she had trouble starting on the cold northern Minnesota mornings, when we needed to get to town. It was always flooding for her and my dad being an over the road trucker wasn't home for weeks at a time and if the old Merc wouldn't start, food could get pretty scarce unless I walked the 4 miles to town (before they had snowmobiles). So I suggested I take the carburetor apart and clean it; after all I had already fixed the lawn mower by cleaning it out (it had what looked like a nail stuck into a piece of cork for the float and valve) anything but the walk. Snow was four foot thick and Dad being about 4 days out on a haul, she said; OK.

These flat head v8's had a 4 barrel carburetor with a weird center section for the choke and accelerator pump circuit and when I got it apart I had never seen anything so complicated. I just wanted to get it back together before the old man got home so I thru it together and had a large hand full of parts and screws left over. To my surprise it started up after a little pumping and we got to town. About a week later my Dad asked me why the Merc no longer had an automatic choke; as he was proud that it was the first car we had with one. I thought I was dead but Dad just laughed and said that Mom never could get used to using a choke. She found out the older fords would start if you pumped the accelerator a few times, without the choke, so she was over pumping the Mercury carb and flooding it.

I said all that to say: you may find a few long winded older gents here and even a few grouchy ones but in between there's a lot of knowledge being passed around.

Oh, and you might understand LM if you knew he was Honda mechanic for many years and has heard every question you can imagine over and over and over... and you can't yell at the customers (if you want them to stick around) so he's retired now and gets to yell at us:-) I worked a few years as a TV repairman (yes junior, they actually repaired TV's and stereos instead of throwing them away) so I know where he's coming from.



Clarence

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