View Full Version : Directly from Seafoam.
Bigsyke
11-13-2008, 10:03 PM
Look what I found;
Sea Foam is an OIL PRODUCT, not a chemical, so do not worry about any secondary affects.
Have you used Sea Foam in your fuel?, Read the attachments for more information.
If your bikes engine began to create enough residue to "STICK" part of your valve train, IT IS TIME TO GET THAT OLD OIL OUT OF THERE!
Yes, the Sea Foam cleans the old deteriorated oil back to liquid, but your crankcase oil will quickly make more residue, your oil has reached the end of its SERVICEABLE LIFE!
Change your oil, read the attachment I have given on CRANKCASE OIL, treat the NEW oil with Sea Foam at 1 1/2 ounces per quart of oil capacity, then MONITOR YOUR OIL and change it when it gets dirty.
Oil is still cheaper than an engine!
Thanks for using Sea Foam!
Attachments with the reply:
Attachment 1:
Sea Foam Motor Treatment used in Crankcase Oil
All Gasoline and Diesel, Rotary style engines
Sea Foam Motor Treatment is a Blended Petroleum Product, NOT A CHEMICAL and is widely used as an old oil residue cleaner and moisture drier in any oil crankcase.
Sea Foam Motor Treatment is most commonly used as a pre service, old oil residue re-liquefier / cleaner and moisture drier, and is also used as an after service additive. Sea Foam Motor Treatment does NOT add significantly to oil volume, so removing oil is NOT required for use, when used according to printed directions on the product container.
1. As a PRE SERVICE CLEANER for old oil residue, (sticky rings or valve train noise), pour 1 ½ ounces of Sea Foam Motor Treatment into the engine oil crankcase for EACH quart of crankcase oil capacity including filter. (Diesels use 1 pint Sea Foam to 4 gallons of oil, please.) Drive a MINIMUM of 30 minutes/miles, MAXIMUM 100 miles, and then do your oil change service (LOF). This is the process of safely/slowly re liquefying the old oil residue so contaminants may flow and be filtered. This also makes your old oil dirtier, quickly, so a LOF service is necessary when the oil gets dirty. Great for Turbocharged & Supercharged applications where hot oils deteriorate so quickly due to heat, and leaves those residues that NEED CLEANING. (LOF = Lube oil & Filter service = OIL CHANGE).
2. As an AFTER SERVICE ADDITIVE into fresh oil, nearly fresh oil, or oil (used condition) that is NOT ready to be changed (by mileage), put 1 ½ ounces Sea Foam Motor Treatment into the crankcase per quart of capacity as described above, then SELF SET a program to MONITOR your oil for level, color and clarity on a mileage, timed, or event basis (like every time you add fuel, etc.) to determine when an oil service is necessary. (LOF) When the oil gets dirty, CHANGE IT!
Sea Foam Motor Treatment will safely and slowly re liquefy old oil residue, This will make your oil need changing BEFORE your normal scheduled LOF service. Only your monitoring of the oil for color and clarity can tell when it is time to do LOF - oil change service, or 3,000 miles, whichever comes first.
Synthetic oils, both blends and 100%, were engineered and are manufactured to be 100% compatible with petroleum based oils, all brands, and vice/versa. Without compatibility, oil manufacturers and engineers would be liable for the results of mixing non-compatible lubricants.
Check your oil; monitor its level, color & clarity to determine need for LOF service!
Change your oil when it gets dirty!
Technical Services Department May 2008 DD
Sea Foam Sales Company
Attachment 2:
Sea Foam Uses in Fuels
Sea Foam Motor Treatment #’s SF-16 (16 ounce), SF-128 (gallon container) and
SF-55 (a 55 gallon drum) is used as a fuel additive in Gasoline, Ethanol Blends, Gas/oil mixes & ALL Diesel fuels. This includes all brands and qualities of available fuels.
When added to these fuels, Sea Foam Motor Treatment was specifically designed to Safely do five (5) simple tasks for you. They are:
1. Sea Foam Motor Treatment is a 100% blended petroleum product. That means Sea Foam is OIL, so adding Sea Foam to ANY fuel, adds lubricity to Fuel systems, Induction systems (Including Drawn through Supercharged applications), upper cylinders, fuel pumps, and related fuel system & Exhaust (Turbocharged) components.
All fuels lack “Protecting” lubrication, Advantage: “Sea Foam”.
2. Sea Foam Motor Treatment contains an oil component that dries fuel system moisture. Moisture breaks down into its basic components of hydrogen and oxygen when Sea Foam Motor Treatment is added to any of the above listed fuels, allowing Sea Foam Motor Treatment to help eliminate problems caused by moisture, like diesel fuel gelling and poor run .Advantage: “Sea Foam”.
3. Sea Foam Motor Treatment contains an oil based high detergent fuel residue cleaner. Using Sea Foam Motor Treatment in your fuel system makes that old fuel residue safely back into liquid. Moisture becomes a “non issue” and allows contaminants to be filtered, as engineered by the manufacturer.
Advantage: “Sea Foam”.
4. Sea Foam Motor Treatments exclusive formula is blended specifically to clean carbon out of the engine as the engine is run. This is accomplished by our cleaning oil formula eliminating old sticky oil residue that holds carbon and allowing that carbon to flow out of the engine dust particle by dust particle. Advantage: “Sea Foam”.
5. Sea Foam Motor Treatment adds volatility to fuel and slows down the rate at which that fuel looses its ability to properly burn. When added to fuel and the fuel is in properly sealed containers or fuel systems, per printed container instructions, Sea Foam Motor Treatment is a fuel stabilizer for up to 2 years. Always run the engine for a long enough period of time to assure the entire system is protected.
Advantage: “Sea Foam”.
Technical Services Department
Sea Foam Sales Company
Updated May, 2008 DD
Last Attachment:
Sea Foam Amounts in Fuel
4 Cycle Type Engines
Diesel
Rotary (Wankel)
2 Cycle type Engines
Sea Foam Products recommends an average of 1 ounce Sea Foam Motor Treatment to each gallon of Gasoline (including 10% & 15% ethanol) and Diesel fuel (including low sulfur & Ultra Low Sulfur blends). With any vehicle or system FACTORY DESIGNED for E-85 fuel, use 2 ounces Sea foam per gallon of the fuel.
Parameters are: 1 – 16 ounce can of Sea Foam Motor Treatment to a MINIMUM of 8 gallons of fuel, Maximum 25 gallons fuel to a 16 ounce can for maintenance. Follow the instructions above for OIL INJECTED engines also. (NO Sea Foam Motor Treatment ever goes into the oil reserve tank for oil injection).
***For all gas/oil mixed fuels (2 cycle) and E-85 Ethanol to be used in systems NOT specifically factory designed for E-85 fuels, DOUBLE the amount of Sea Foam Motor Treatment used per gallon.
Sea Foam Motor Treatment is blended OIL, and will not run a gasoline, Gas/oil mix or Ethanol engine without introducing HYDROCARBONS (gasoline / ethanol) to the mixture at a minimum 50%.
Fuel injector cleaning machines in a controlled environment use Sea Foam Motor Treatment as their safe Cleaning agent mixed with gasoline or ethanol blend at a ratio of 50% Gasoline/Ethanol blend & 50% Sea Foam Motor Treatment.
Technical Services Department
Sea Foam Sales Company
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Updated May, 2008
worangejuice
11-13-2008, 10:04 PM
this stuff is a lifesaver!!!!!!!!!!!!
WangonwWarrior
11-13-2008, 10:11 PM
Im too lazy to read all that but I have heard good things about this stuff.
roboticnissan
11-13-2008, 10:22 PM
i started reading and actually thought you were talking about real sea foam from the sea!! wow mind boggleing.
theronin
11-13-2008, 10:33 PM
seafoam is the shit. if you havent done it to your 240 yet, you should. i guarantee that it will run better.
allntrlundrgrnd
11-13-2008, 10:37 PM
i only put it in crankcase
theronin
11-13-2008, 10:42 PM
i only put it in crankcase
then you're not getting its full use.
1. start engine.
2. disconnect vac line from brake booster.
3. place vac line into cup of Seafoam.
4. car will die.
5. let sit 5 min
6. start her up.
7. ......
8. PROFIT!
n240sxfnatic
11-13-2008, 11:00 PM
so im gonna pick some up over thanksgiving break, just making sure this is the right stuff? Ive never bought it before.
O'Reilly Auto Parts - Results for Shopping Search (http://www.oreillyauto.com/EW3/ProductDetail.do?id=1012704472&line=SEF&itemNumber=SF16&toolsAccMoreIndex=5&didSearchFor=Sea+Foam&bid=1226642165088&cycleCount=905¤tPage=0)
Ineedparts
11-13-2008, 11:02 PM
A friend of mine swears by this, but I figured it was just another marvel mystery oil. I am convinced. Theronin, good fuckin idea, I will be seafoaming everything from the zuma to the truck..
Ineedparts
11-13-2008, 11:03 PM
theronin, do you just fill a cup and let it suck untill it dies? Or should I limit it to a certain amount?
Bigsyke
11-13-2008, 11:41 PM
1/3 of the can.
Ive heard nothing but horrible speculations about putting it into the crank case, but nobody really knows, this should bust the myth.
I wonder if mods would ever sticky this.
Kalashnikov
11-14-2008, 03:32 AM
Yep, it's fun too!
YouTube - seafoam 240sx (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tAxopduX42k&feature=related)
ACCORDING TO SEAFOAM.COM:
With engine warm, slowly pour 1/3 to 1/2 pint through carburetor or throttle body throat. (If vehicle is port injected slowly pour SEA FOAM through direct manifold vacuum line that will feed all cylinders, possible sources are P.C.V. valve or brake booster line.) This will pull SEA FOAM down on top of the pistons and to the back of the intake valves to dissolve carbon. Turn ignition off. Restart engine after 5 minutes. If severe carbon build up is apparent, use more Sea Foam as previously directed. Make sure exhaust is well ventilated when using Sea Foam in these various ways as fumes will be extreme for a short time.
Pour 1/3 to 1/2 pint into oil crank case to clean rings, lifters, dirty parts and remove moisture.
Pour 1/3 to 1 full pint into fuel tank to clean injectors, carburetor jets, fuel lines and remove moisture.
Immediate Results: Smoother idle, increased R.P.M.'s better throttle response and improved performance. See label on can for detailed results for use in each area.
kawika219
11-14-2008, 06:16 AM
1/3 of the can.
Ive heard nothing but horrible speculations about putting it into the crank case, but nobody really knows, this should bust the myth.
I wonder if mods would ever sticky this.
the bad part about it is, if you have a gasket that was leaking but sealed by the gunk you're sol. seafoam will clean it out and the leak will appear
FaLKoN240
11-14-2008, 07:54 AM
I've heard that it fouls sparkplugs and o2 sensors... that's why I've never done it to any of my engine components.
Just the gas tank.
CrimsonRockett
11-14-2008, 09:12 AM
Probably best to do it before doing a tune up?
I have spare o2 sensors that are bad, so I could run seafoam using a crappy o2, then put in the good o2 after everything is said and done.
Whoever wrote that "direct from Seafoam" information obviously failed high school chemistry... and is an idiot. Makes my brain hurt.
Since when is any oil byproduct not a "chemical?"
Seafoam is just a bunch of strong organic solvents.
neilsan
11-14-2008, 04:38 PM
I know it works well as a top engine cleaner (sucked in through the intake) but I'd be afraid to use this stuff in the crank case, because supposedly large chunks of coked oil can break loose and end up blocking the flow of oil in certain passageways or clogging the screen in the pickup.
smelly240
11-14-2008, 04:42 PM
the only way i ever used the stuff was in the crankcase. used it in my sr years and years ago - my oil looks new ALL the time now (German 0w30 GC syntec - google it - its not normal syntec)
shit worked like a charm tho - ran the piss outta it for about 10 mins - oil changed - beat on it a hour - changed it
:D
my car is a sits more than moves type car tho.
Bigsyke
11-14-2008, 04:57 PM
according to the details, it wont clog, because it breaks the sludge down to mix with the oil.
on the KA24's changing the oil filter off takes 23 seconds
480sx
11-14-2008, 05:18 PM
This whole information about 'pouring' seafoam into the manifold is just garbage. Such a half assed way to do a job that can if done right really clean out your head.
If you want to do it right, you get a 'medical IV style' drip bottle with an adjustable flow control. You hook it up to the break booster line, and start the car. Adjust the drip to where its dripping into the motor very slowly, this will allow the seafoam to vaporize. Let it idle like that for 3-5 min. Then, raise your idle to about 3000 for 1 min. Your car will smoke like a freight train. Repeat till all the stuff is gone. When its all gone, go drive the crap out of your car to burn it all out. Done, correctly. :bigok:
Bigsyke
11-14-2008, 05:51 PM
You really want to get a can of deep creep and spray the Throttle body to clean the IM. Id really only use the canned seafoam for Fuel and oil.
Maybe a tbsp of seafoam in the oil would be enough to clean every 3k miles.
HyperTek
11-14-2008, 06:02 PM
you can do water as well.. i done water thru my rotary... thats what rotary peeps use since we figure it wouldnt be as harsh and still "steam clean"
Matej
11-14-2008, 06:11 PM
Seafoam is delicious.
SochBAT
11-14-2008, 06:29 PM
I hate the smoke. So i'm gonna do this at school and play it off that my car's being weird. Hahaha.
http://bp3.blogger.com/_TjQtbgIlN_g/R1EJU7XFwEI/AAAAAAAAA2I/SZWQF51VnJ8/s1600-R/cool+seafoam.jpg
S14DB
11-14-2008, 06:44 PM
Replace your O2 after you do this. It will be fubar...
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v108/S14DB/240sx/O2sensor/O2compare.jpg
chvybeatsford
11-14-2008, 07:47 PM
Did it through any 02 codes after doing so? Jus wondering cause the guy i got my sr from said he jus seafoamed it.
S14DB
11-14-2008, 07:56 PM
Naw, my gas millage went to shit a tank full or 2 after I seafoamed. pulled the front O2 and found that. Replaced and MPG went back up.
soreballz
11-14-2008, 08:46 PM
then you're not getting its full use.
1. start engine.
2. disconnect vac line from brake booster.
3. place vac line into cup of Seafoam.
4. car will die.
5. let sit 5 min
6. start her up.
7. ......
8. PROFIT!
If the car dies, you're doing it wrong.
Probably best to do it before doing a tune up?
Definitely.
SexPanda
11-14-2008, 08:54 PM
Seafoam is the shit. Honest. Its the magic snake oil that really does what it claims.
At work, if a GOv comes in and is running rough, guess what? SEAFOAM THE MOFO! After I get rid of my cats, Im gonna do an entire 200 dollar service on my car, oil, fuel filter, air filter, trans fluid, diff fluid, brake fluid, etc. The engine is getting seafoamed.
timtiminy
11-14-2008, 08:58 PM
The IV drip is the best way to do this. I used to work at a jiffy lube and they use a similar product and IV drip system. not sure where you can get the IV setup though...
Bigsyke
11-14-2008, 09:06 PM
Replace your O2 after you do this. It will be fubar...
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v108/S14DB/240sx/O2sensor/O2compare.jpg
Yea but that only accounts for injecting it via the intake manifold, im sure fuel/crankcase wont make its way fully concentrated into the o2 sensor.
SexPanda
11-14-2008, 09:12 PM
The IV drip is the best way to do this. I used to work at a jiffy lube and they use a similar product and IV drip system. not sure where you can get the IV setup though...
Date a nurse.
ebay
medical supply store
local crack head
S14DB
11-14-2008, 09:13 PM
Yea but that only accounts for injecting it via the intake manifold, im sure fuel/crankcase wont make its way fully concentrated into the o2 sensor.
No, that was fuel mix only. The red is the chemicals in seafoam.
SexPanda
11-14-2008, 09:20 PM
im gonna hit up a junk yard and get some used 02 sensors, screw them in, run the seafoam, that way I cant mess anything up...
thank god my car is obd1 lol.
Bigsyke
11-15-2008, 11:38 AM
No, that was fuel mix only. The red is the chemicals in seafoam.
good to know! I assume this is not carbon, and cant be cleaned off?
SoSideways
11-17-2008, 08:56 AM
The IV drip is the best way to do this. I used to work at a jiffy lube and they use a similar product and IV drip system. not sure where you can get the IV setup though...
Go into the free clinic, and tell them you need an IV drip...
Then run like the wind?
xDsKuba
11-17-2008, 09:16 AM
Go into the free clinic, and tell them you need an IV drip...
Then run like the wind?
AHAHA nice one!! run like the wind hahah
S14DB
11-18-2008, 06:39 AM
good to know! I assume this is not carbon, and cant be cleaned off?
No, it's the chemicals in the seafoam that contaminate the O2 sensor. Some argue it's a reaction with the additive package in the gasoline and not seafoams fault. But I am of the thought that gas doesn't kill my O2 sensor in under 500 miles normally so it is the seafoam.
I do similar to what SexPanda says. I wait till I'm going to replace the O2 anyways and seafoam bomb the car. Then after a few tank fulls of plain gasoline. I replace the O2 and spark plugs.
SochBAT
11-18-2008, 11:06 AM
I just ran this in the car last night, peachy as hell.
Added it to the crankcase, brake booster line, then finally gas tank. Stalled out, started up and was smokey. So cool.
One of my vac lines came off and started making it run really harsh but its fixed now.
+10 for Seafoam
soreballz
11-18-2008, 11:41 AM
^Don't forget to change your oil afterwards.
SoSideways
11-18-2008, 11:43 AM
^Don't forget to change your oil afterwards.
And check your O2 sensor and see if it looks like S14DB's red messed up O2 after like 500 miles or so.
SochBAT
11-18-2008, 11:43 AM
Yea, new oil + flush, NGK plugs and wires.
Now i gotta get a damn o2 sensor. I know mine is shit now.
SoSideways
11-18-2008, 12:01 PM
Yeah see, I would find a bolt to take the O2 sensor's place for the Seafoam treatment, then replace the O2 after like 500 miles, so that you can keep your current one.
94_240sx
11-18-2008, 12:59 PM
I don't know about other locations, but my local Walmart started carrying Seafoam and it's much cheaper than other auto parts stores. You can find it in engine oil section.
Bigsyke
11-18-2008, 01:31 PM
I just ran this in the car last night, peachy as hell.
Added it to the crankcase, brake booster line, then finally gas tank. Stalled out, started up and was smokey. So cool.
One of my vac lines came off and started making it run really harsh but its fixed now.
+10 for Seafoam
I would keep the seafoam in for about 50 miles of normal driving. I just finished 100 miles of driving with seafoam in the oil and after I changed it, my timing tensioner seemed to be working much better, which cured a nice hesitation. THere is also no more >1500rpm popping from the exhaust durring decel.
I changed with amsoil 5w30
I don't know about other locations, but my local Walmart started carrying Seafoam and it's much cheaper than other auto parts stores. You can find it in engine oil section.
Home depot has it the cheapest.
Also Auto-RX seems to be the best and only safe top engine cleaner availibe. After reading about it, its the only thing to use in the oil
Nimso
11-18-2008, 02:18 PM
im gonna hit up a junk yard and get some used 02 sensors, screw them in, run the seafoam, that way I cant mess anything up...
thank god my car is obd1 lol.
i did the seafoam in the vacuum tube thing on my 04 350z, no o2 sensor problems or any other problems for that matter... i really dont see why everyone thinks that it will mess something up... maybe it was a bad/cheap batch of o2 sensors from the manufacturers are the reason people are having problems? i dunno... but i had success with mine... it was fun too because on mine, a ton of white/grey smoke came out of the exhaust and everyone was looking over at my car... lol
SoSideways
11-18-2008, 02:22 PM
i did the seafoam in the vacuum tube thing on my 04 350z, no o2 sensor problems or any other problems for that matter... i really dont see why everyone thinks that it will mess something up... maybe it was a bad/cheap batch of o2 sensors from the manufacturers are the reason people are having problems? i dunno... but i had success with mine... it was fun too because on mine, a ton of white/grey smoke came out of the exhaust and everyone was looking over at my car... lol
Did you even read the thread?
S14DB took a pic of his O2 sensor AFTER he did the Sea Foam treatment, and next to it was a brand new O2 sensor.
Look at it.
Does it look like it's normal? No.
murda-c
11-18-2008, 02:48 PM
Yeah i just plug up the big o2 sensor whole with an 18mm drain bolt.
I don't have a second o2 sensor right now.
Nimso
11-18-2008, 04:05 PM
Did you even read the thread?
S14DB took a pic of his O2 sensor AFTER he did the Sea Foam treatment, and next to it was a brand new O2 sensor.
Look at it.
Does it look like it's normal? No.
thank you, but what i said was maybe it was a bad batch of o2 sensors or something because mine didnt go bad, a lot of other people have done this and not had their o2 sensors go bad... so did you even read what i wrote??? also, his turned pink... does that mean that the o2 sensor fried? or did it just clean the color off of the o2 sensor, like pouring bleach on a piece of colored cloth... just a thought...
Bigsyke
11-18-2008, 04:26 PM
doesnt have to turn pink to go bad. It could still foul.
Nimso
11-18-2008, 05:10 PM
doesnt have to turn pink to go bad. It could still foul.
yea i was talking about homedudes comment about my comment about someone saying that their o2 sensor went bad...
i dont mean to sound like an ass, its just 3 am and im hyped up on sugar and starbucks and lack of sleep... lol
Mr.s13r
11-21-2008, 08:39 AM
What do you guys think of this, found it on 240atlanta in a seafoam thread also:
I'll add a few words on the Seafoam cleaner. It contains no beneficial fuel detergents. However it is loaded with alcohol, which when burned gives the impression of better ignition. So it is basically a "one tank wonder". Better to spend your money on a valid polyether amine fuel cleaning product like BG 44K or Techron in my opinion. My motorcycle friends all rave on the Seafoam, but in actuality all it does is burn faster, thus fooling us into thinking it is a wonder drug cleaner. So I got curious and analyzed the Seafoam. It turned out to be just plain isopropyl alcohol, a dilution solvent, and a small percentage of light mineral oil. No significant metal additives or detergents to be found. So...my two cents worth of advice is spend your money elsewhere...
Mikey B.
Gas Chromatograph/Fuels Chemist
Zero_SX
11-21-2008, 08:51 AM
I just ran this in the car last night, peachy as hell.
Added it to the crankcase, brake booster line, then finally gas tank. Stalled out, started up and was smokey. So cool.
One of my vac lines came off and started making it run really harsh but its fixed now.
+10 for Seafoam
shut up. took you, what, 3 years to finally do this? always giving excuses why NOT to do it. way to experience the smoke-a-thon 2008! :bow:
0wn3r
11-21-2008, 02:44 PM
you can do water as well.. i done water thru my rotary... thats what rotary peeps use since we figure it wouldnt be as harsh and still "steam clean"
hydrolock works wonders for all cars.
:dead:
SoSideways
11-21-2008, 03:07 PM
hydrolock works wonders for all cars.
:dead:
I suppose all the cars running water injection should all be hydrolocked now too right?
:dead:
0wn3r
11-23-2008, 06:17 PM
I suppose all the cars running water injection should all be hydrolocked now too right?
:dead:
you're telling me you pour water into your crankcase?
SexPanda
11-23-2008, 06:32 PM
I'll add a few words on the Seafoam cleaner. It contains no beneficial fuel detergents. However it is loaded with alcohol, which when burned gives the impression of better ignition. So it is basically a "one tank wonder". Better to spend your money on a valid polyether amine fuel cleaning product like BG 44K or Techron in my opinion. My motorcycle friends all rave on the Seafoam, but in actuality all it does is burn faster, thus fooling us into thinking it is a wonder drug cleaner. So I got curious and analyzed the Seafoam. It turned out to be just plain isopropyl alcohol, a dilution solvent, and a small percentage of light mineral oil. No significant metal additives or detergents to be found. So...my two cents worth of advice is spend your money elsewhere...
Mikey B.
Gas Chromatograph/Fuels Chemist
shit still works, idc what it actually is. And it melts right through styrofoam cups. So dont use one to hold the seafoam for the brake booster line.
soreballz
11-23-2008, 06:50 PM
you're telling me you pour water into your crankcase?
:rofl:
Okay, does somebody else want to explain to this guy why he's a complete dumbshit, or should I?
MetricHotrods.com
11-23-2008, 10:30 PM
seafoam works. i seafoamed my VR6 back in the day about 750 miles before i pulled the head, and lo and behond, the valves and piston domes were GLISTENING, i thought i heard opera voices singing when i pulled the head off.
but yea, itll fuck your cat and o2 sensors, not to mention thin out your existing crankcase oil.
also, if the only thing you have keeping your car from smoking is a thin layer of carbon aruond your piston rings, itll start to smoke afterward. just something ot htink about.
MetricHotrods.com
11-23-2008, 10:34 PM
hydrolock works wonders for all cars.
:dead:
actually, you sir are the retard.
if you pull your intake off exposing your throttle body while your car is running, then put water into a spray bottle like an old windex bottle, then spray it into your throttle body as you rev it a bit, the intake mani temps turn the water to steam, and it cleans your valves and combusition chambers.
i have done that a couple different times.
you just dont have a clue what youre talking about.
shade
11-23-2008, 10:51 PM
I remember getting pulled over by a cop when I seafoamed my car. Too much smoke, haha.
That was like two years ago, awesome stuff.
0wn3r
11-24-2008, 08:01 AM
actually, you sir are the retard.
if you pull your intake off exposing your throttle body while your car is running, then put water into a spray bottle like an old windex bottle, then spray it into your throttle body as you rev it a bit, the intake mani temps turn the water to steam, and it cleans your valves and combusition chambers.
i have done that a couple different times.
you just dont have a clue what youre talking about.
it was sounding like he was saying that just dumping water into the crankcase and running the motor was a good idea. I don't know about you, but I'm not about to use Aquafina to lubricate my engine you fucking shit stabber ..back off.
SoSideways
11-24-2008, 10:05 AM
it was sounding like he was saying that just dumping water into the crankcase and running the motor was a good idea. I don't know about you, but I'm not about to use Aquafina to lubricate my engine you fucking shit stabber ..back off.
Do you know how a rotary engine works?
Because if you do, maybe you would understand what HyperTek was saying, and that you would realize how much of a dumbass you came off as, which, 2 other people other than myself have pointed out to you.
shade
11-24-2008, 10:15 AM
Water injection. Go to a rotary forum.
MetricHotrods.com
11-24-2008, 07:25 PM
it was sounding like he was saying that just dumping water into the crankcase and running the motor was a good idea. I don't know about you, but I'm not about to use Aquafina to lubricate my engine you fucking shit stabber ..back off.
ah...i get it. not only are you a 19 yr old name caller, you ant even admit to just being fucking wrong. its cool. when you can differentiate your asshole from your elbow, you are welcomed to rejoin the conversation. until then, step aside and let the grown ups discuss things.
0wn3r
11-25-2008, 08:32 AM
Do you know how a rotary engine works?
Because if you do, maybe you would understand what HyperTek was saying, and that you would realize how much of a dumbass you came off as, which, 2 other people other than myself have pointed out to you.
Ok, and how many of you own a rotary in here and treat it the same way as one? Last I checked, a Silvia didn't have a rotary in it from the factory. Again, I wouldn't dump water in the crankcase.
Metric, look who was name calling first ;) bitch
If you were to go out and ask people, instead of seafoam, how about using water in your crankcase and gas tank? how many do you think would say yes? Just go out and spend the $8 on a can.
soreballz
11-25-2008, 09:37 PM
^SHUT THE FUCK UP. You know, the way you're talking, I'm starting to doubt you even know what a crankcase is...
SoSideways
11-26-2008, 07:44 AM
Ok, and how many of you own a rotary in here and treat it the same way as one? Last I checked, a Silvia didn't have a rotary in it from the factory. Again, I wouldn't dump water in the crankcase.
Metric, look who was name calling first ;) bitch
If you were to go out and ask people, instead of seafoam, how about using water in your crankcase and gas tank? how many do you think would say yes? Just go out and spend the $8 on a can.
You do realize there isn't a crankcase on a rotary engine?
Hypertek owns an FC, which HAS a 13B rotary engine in there.
Seriously, you need to shut the fuck up and get out of this conversation.
Along with the idiots that can't fucking think for themselves and actually dumps water into their crankcase and fuel tank.
All of those people, GTFO right meow.
0wn3r
11-26-2008, 08:10 AM
You do realize there isn't a crankcase on a rotary engine?
Hypertek owns an FC, which HAS a 13B rotary engine in there.
Seriously, you need to shut the fuck up and get out of this conversation.
Along with the idiots that can't fucking think for themselves and actually dumps water into their crankcase and fuel tank.
All of those people, GTFO right meow.
That's my point. There ARE people that can't think for themselves and would pour water into those after reading his post. True, their engines should blow but I'd rather point out the fact that they shouldn't in case I need parts from their motor someday : )
And I never said a rotary does have a crankcase, I'm saying that this is a Nissan board and I wouldn't go around giving advice I use on a Mazda engine and tell people about it on a Nissan board if there's not much relevance. The way you might use water in a rotary is different than how you'd use seafoam in a 4-cyl.
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