Certainly, you need to clean this glop out of any area where it can interfere with the throttle butterfly, and clean it off the fuel rail nozzle area. If one or more of the nozzles is plugged up, your performance will be affected significantly. I don't see much hazard in leaving some of it down in the intake manifold. The spacer between the support plate and the intake manifold is extremely critical as to sealing to both mating parts, and the gaskets are complex and delicate. If you feel you must replace these, try to get NOS ones, or at least be careful to save the originals and inspect them carefully. Any air leak here, even very slight, will really screw up the way the car idles. Nothing I have found is a magic elixir for dissolving the goop, I think acetone is very good, but you must be careful around any non-metallic parts, as it very likely will attack those too. Lacquer thinner and Carburetor cleaner are some help also, but basic grunt work (scraping, peeling, gouging etc.) is what we are all reduced to sooner or later. Dick Benjamin ----- Original Message ----- From: DAVID MORRISON <drmcross@xxxxxxx> To: <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Saturday, August 31, 2002 5:47 AM Subject: IML: 1981 Potting Material In the process of doing some general maintenance on my 1981 EFI. I have removed the support plate to get access to egr valve, and it is clear that some of the potting material from the fuel flow meter and computer has flowed into the throttle body. While there are still pools of material on the support plate, the throttle definitely needs cleaning and at least one injector is coated with black goo. Does anyone have a suggestion for cleaning the goo off the plate (thought I would start with "Goo Gone")? I am already replacing the spacer assembly between the intake manifold and throttle body... but how worried do you think I should be about cleaning this out of the intake manifold too? Dave Morrison 81 EFI 82 FS EFI (still for sale)