Hi,
Since running out of my last tube of Dirko HT Red, I have been researching.
I’m stumped... So many of us use Dirko HT Red yet it’s not fuel resistant. Why did stihl recommend this for so long when it clearly says nothing about fuel resistance in the material data sheet and their online charts (any parts that come into contact with fuel for Dirko HT aren’t ticked)

Has anyone here used Dirko and had
leaks / failures that weren’t attributed to poor application?
Out of interest I’m going to submerge Dirko in both gasoline and Motomix, weigh it before and after and see if it has any affect after 24 hours, a week and 4 weeks, see if pulling it apart is easier than the control too. I’ll keep a few strips for control. I’ll let it set up for 24 hours and section it up into short strips.

No need to talk about Yamahabond, hondabond, threebond 1104 or Loctite 518... This is for Dirko alone.
Since running out of my last tube of Dirko HT Red, I have been researching.
I’m stumped... So many of us use Dirko HT Red yet it’s not fuel resistant. Why did stihl recommend this for so long when it clearly says nothing about fuel resistance in the material data sheet and their online charts (any parts that come into contact with fuel for Dirko HT aren’t ticked)

Has anyone here used Dirko and had
leaks / failures that weren’t attributed to poor application?
Out of interest I’m going to submerge Dirko in both gasoline and Motomix, weigh it before and after and see if it has any affect after 24 hours, a week and 4 weeks, see if pulling it apart is easier than the control too. I’ll keep a few strips for control. I’ll let it set up for 24 hours and section it up into short strips.

No need to talk about Yamahabond, hondabond, threebond 1104 or Loctite 518... This is for Dirko alone.