SCT Tuning and Seafoam.
#11
#12
Well you cant stall the motor while its off right? I'm sure one of us rednecks could figure out how to do that lol. No what Ive read is that you turn it on, pull the brake booster line off and let it suck up the seafoam slowly until your engine dies. Once it dies let it sit for 30 minutes and let the seafoam do its magic. Then when you crack it back up again (more clear huh) it smokes like crazy. Here are my questions as they have been in debate in every seafoam thread.
1) Adding some to the gas tank? Who has done this and have you had good or bad results? I cant see the harm here but who knows, anyone?
2) Adding some to the oil. Alot of people have convinced me NOT to do this. I forgot the reason but what I remember was that you MUST change your oil within 50 miles of putting it in there and that There will still be some residual crap and you should change it again soon. Just seems like 50$ in oil and filters aren't worth trying to clean it through oil.
On the side note of the SCT Tuner, I must say I am VERY impressed with Hemifevers customer support. He answered all my 8 million PM's with nice respectable answers. Helped me find my PCM part number, and helped me decide on my tunes for my mods. I ordered it and within 4 hours I had a shipped notification in my gmail. That is beyond most customer service these days, but I guess he is in the South. We all know the Southern Hospitality is hard to beat. Anyway back on track. Getting the 87,89,91 tunes (93 is rare in my area). Everything I had read about SCT Tuners is all good, just would like to hear how easy the machine is to operate. Anyone?
1) Adding some to the gas tank? Who has done this and have you had good or bad results? I cant see the harm here but who knows, anyone?
2) Adding some to the oil. Alot of people have convinced me NOT to do this. I forgot the reason but what I remember was that you MUST change your oil within 50 miles of putting it in there and that There will still be some residual crap and you should change it again soon. Just seems like 50$ in oil and filters aren't worth trying to clean it through oil.
On the side note of the SCT Tuner, I must say I am VERY impressed with Hemifevers customer support. He answered all my 8 million PM's with nice respectable answers. Helped me find my PCM part number, and helped me decide on my tunes for my mods. I ordered it and within 4 hours I had a shipped notification in my gmail. That is beyond most customer service these days, but I guess he is in the South. We all know the Southern Hospitality is hard to beat. Anyway back on track. Getting the 87,89,91 tunes (93 is rare in my area). Everything I had read about SCT Tuners is all good, just would like to hear how easy the machine is to operate. Anyone?
#13
Well you cant stall the motor while its off right? I'm sure one of us rednecks could figure out how to do that lol. No what Ive read is that you turn it on, pull the brake booster line off and let it suck up the seafoam slowly until your engine dies. Once it dies let it sit for 30 minutes and let the seafoam do its magic. Then when you crack it back up again (more clear huh) it smokes like crazy. Here are my questions as they have been in debate in every seafoam thread.
1) Adding some to the gas tank? Who has done this and have you had good or bad results? I cant see the harm here but who knows, anyone?
2) Adding some to the oil. Alot of people have convinced me NOT to do this. I forgot the reason but what I remember was that you MUST change your oil within 50 miles of putting it in there and that There will still be some residual crap and you should change it again soon. Just seems like 50$ in oil and filters aren't worth trying to clean it through oil.
On the side note of the SCT Tuner, I must say I am VERY impressed with Hemifevers customer support. He answered all my 8 million PM's with nice respectable answers. Helped me find my PCM part number, and helped me decide on my tunes for my mods. I ordered it and within 4 hours I had a shipped notification in my gmail. That is beyond most customer service these days, but I guess he is in the South. We all know the Southern Hospitality is hard to beat. Anyway back on track. Getting the 87,89,91 tunes (93 is rare in my area). Everything I had read about SCT Tuners is all good, just would like to hear how easy the machine is to operate. Anyone?
1) Adding some to the gas tank? Who has done this and have you had good or bad results? I cant see the harm here but who knows, anyone?
2) Adding some to the oil. Alot of people have convinced me NOT to do this. I forgot the reason but what I remember was that you MUST change your oil within 50 miles of putting it in there and that There will still be some residual crap and you should change it again soon. Just seems like 50$ in oil and filters aren't worth trying to clean it through oil.
On the side note of the SCT Tuner, I must say I am VERY impressed with Hemifevers customer support. He answered all my 8 million PM's with nice respectable answers. Helped me find my PCM part number, and helped me decide on my tunes for my mods. I ordered it and within 4 hours I had a shipped notification in my gmail. That is beyond most customer service these days, but I guess he is in the South. We all know the Southern Hospitality is hard to beat. Anyway back on track. Getting the 87,89,91 tunes (93 is rare in my area). Everything I had read about SCT Tuners is all good, just would like to hear how easy the machine is to operate. Anyone?
2... Don't add it to your oil. If anything, use Rislone in place of a quart every oil change. You won't be sorry. Other peeps on here use different things, and I respect their opinions as well. So it's up to you.
#14
#15
Zman, between you, HeyYou, Aim4Squirrels, and JasonW I have been lead nothing but in the right direction. If you read this forum enough and know who can be the most helpful and how to ask your question properly (AFTER RESEARCHING DF), you get nothing but good results.
I hate to say I have NEVER worked on ANY vehicle before my 200,000 mile upgrade. Getting the service manual, reading all of the knowledge here, and asking the right questions with the right information in a polite way will always get you closer to fixing your problem. Because of you guys I now have the confidence to do almost anything in my truck other then the transmission :P
Thanks again guys
Ya you pour it in slowly so it doesnt stall IMMEDIATELY. You will eventually stall it or run out of seafoam.
I hate to say I have NEVER worked on ANY vehicle before my 200,000 mile upgrade. Getting the service manual, reading all of the knowledge here, and asking the right questions with the right information in a polite way will always get you closer to fixing your problem. Because of you guys I now have the confidence to do almost anything in my truck other then the transmission :P
Thanks again guys
Ya you pour it in slowly so it doesnt stall IMMEDIATELY. You will eventually stall it or run out of seafoam.
#16
#17
#18
I only asked because the directions on the can, clearly state how to do it. I'm looking at the can right now, and was going to post a pic or quote as to what it says. In case you didn't have it yet . And screw the "hood" , they will get over it. Plus, it might not even be that bad, because of the fixes you've done.
#19
I only asked because the directions on the can, clearly state how to do it. I'm looking at the can right now, and was going to post a pic or quote as to what it says. In case you didn't have it yet . And screw the "hood" , they will get over it. Plus, it might not even be that bad, because of the fixes you've done.
#20
Yeah thats why im asking people BB, because I know lots of people have done it. Ive read their instructions, but they call it the miracle solve everything put it everywhere liquid. A manufacturer will always tell you to use it on everything so you need to buy more. Just thought I'd ask from other experiences how they did it, what the easiest ways were to do it, and problems people encountered. Your right though everyone says to do it a different way lol