If You're Going to Make Something, Here's How to Make It Robust

WIRED 

Christopher Tidy was 10 years old the first time he took apart an engine. The carburetor--the block of machinery that supplies a gas engine with fuel and air and helps to spark ignition--was a mess. It was blocked with thick layers of congealed fuel and dust. Tidy saw the problem and just happened to have some tools nearby and a burning curiosity about how exactly this thing worked and what he could do to fix it. That quickly turned into an attempt "to assemble a kind of Frankenstein engine" out of the parts of many discarded petrol engines. He disassembled the rumbling machine piece by piece until he found the offending parts, then doused the carburetor in gasoline, followed by water and dish soap, then scrubbed it clean with a toothbrush.