Quote:
I never turned the fuel off to keep the cork wet
I agree with everything except what I quoted. First, you need to be able to turn off the valve in emergency procedures as well as shutdown. Second, the way the cork works, if you leave the selector in one position most of the time, you won't be bathing the whole cone in gas due to the way it is made and how the cone rotates in the valve body. You need to rotate this periodically to keep the cork evenly exposed to gas and to be able to keep the cork sealed against the valve body. Keeping it in one spot means one part of the cone is getting soaked while the other side is not. If you take one of these apart, you will find that the the used cork has streaks or rings around the cone face from where dirt or other stuff got caught between the cork and valve body. I think rotating the cone moves the cork through its range of motion and helps prevent this.
I've got a few of the selectors for the L-5 and the last one I opened had a beautiful cork, except for the patches which had deteriorated from the surface of the cone and were dry rotted. It COULD have been made to work with fuel lube, but I got another one. You can owner-manufacture the cork cone for a replacement but there are some gotcha's; #1 it is hard to find the right sized piece of correct quality cork; #2 it is hard to find someone who can put it on a lathe and properly turn it and fit it into the valve body; #3 it takes some doing to get the approval from Uncle Sugar. I know a guy who can help you with 1 and 2 and if you PM me your email, I'll send you his name.
As for teflon, I'll defer to the real licensed mechanics out there. I know some people have done it, but any field approval of such a thing would need some approved data to back it up. I don't know if that is out there available.