You want CLEAN?
Last time I pulled the top end of my engine off, it was filthy. Inside the Lower Intake Manifold, back of the throttle plate and IAC passage, inside the Supercharger.....always carboned up.
This time I opened it up and it was SPOTLESS after 50k HARD miles. Anyone care to take a guess as to why?
This time I opened it up and it was SPOTLESS after 50k HARD miles. Anyone care to take a guess as to why?
Oh duh, water injection. Kills carbon with one fell spray!
EDIT: i should spritz some water in mine sometime, and see how it goes.. But i don't wanna knock the world loose either, and clog my cat, until i can afford to swap it.
EDIT: i should spritz some water in mine sometime, and see how it goes.. But i don't wanna knock the world loose either, and clog my cat, until i can afford to swap it.
You got it. That'* the FINAL answer. Clean as a whistle. Works like a charm. And I don't run it very often either.
Great old-school trick for this was spraying water into the carb of a running engine with the downpipe disconnected. Most cars would blow chunks of carbon out the back. This usually became necessary after carbon deposits caused deiseling after shutoff on a carb'ed car. FI cars don't have the deiseling effect, as the fuel is entirely shut off, but still suffer from carbon buildup over time.
Water Injection has many benefits, this being a big one of them.
Great old-school trick for this was spraying water into the carb of a running engine with the downpipe disconnected. Most cars would blow chunks of carbon out the back. This usually became necessary after carbon deposits caused deiseling after shutoff on a carb'ed car. FI cars don't have the deiseling effect, as the fuel is entirely shut off, but still suffer from carbon buildup over time.
Water Injection has many benefits, this being a big one of them.



