On the Chop?
They were original metal tips that had worn and leaked.
Zero to do with rubber tips or modern fuel at all.
Never claimed the issue had anything to do with that.
Great. So why did you never bring up metal tips being worn until now? Why didn't you bring up the exact cause of your 550 bike and instead talked about Ethanol (which doesn't apply AT ALL to your bike OR JWilde's bike? Why would you recommend a type of fuel to JWilde to address HIS leaking issues when he doesn't have rubber tips? And how did you FIX the issue of your leaking carbs due to worn metal tips?
I DID mention that my 1100F HATED ethanol fuel.
That bike did leak. Not from the floats, but the cross over tube.
Didn't leak from the floats, more irrelevant anecdote.
That story was just to show that via personal experience a fuel leak is not something that you should just ignore.
No one suggested that anyone should ignore a fuel leak.
I will stand by my statements that there is absolutely no reason to ever use an aftermarket carb kit on these bikes.
I don't take issue with this statement at all.
Have you even read what was posted?
You really are off base.
With your comments I would really wonder why anyone would use you for thier carbs.
Don't sound like you deal with old bikes much, or can understand what a customer is talking about to diagnose an issue.
I stand by the statement to use higher octane fuel. It works for me.
I stand buy avoiding ethanol. Most agree on this.
I stand by my story about my 1100f, and if you would like to talk more I will be more then happy to tell you, or anyone, what did and didn't happen. I say it was the fuel. Never talked about tips or any of that junk.
I stand by the fact my chopper was on fire after a fuel leak. Never said that was fuel related or the magical tips.
You do know that ethanol fuel effects more then just the rubber bits? I'm sure someone that rebuilds carbs would have talked about the sediment that forms due to the fuel. But I'm sure that couldn't cause a metal tip to not seal well....