Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 30 of 36

Thread: Ever hear of Sea Foam Engine Treatment?

  1. #1
    Is Bat Boy KevMcNJ's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2002
    Location
    South Carolina, USA :10 hours from Indy, 80 minutes from Darlington, & 7 hours from Disney World
    Posts
    19,706

    Ever hear of Sea Foam Engine Treatment?

    http://www.seafoamsales.com/motor-treatment.html

    I was in a gas station a couple days ago and theres a Jag at the next pump sitting there idling and theres TONS of white smoke pouring out of the exhaust. Too thick to even see thru

    Then I hear a rattle from the engine comaprtment and the driver steps out of the car and I say to him
    "I think you blew a head gasket"

    He says no "I just added sea foam to my car. I do it all the time."

    I never heard of this stuff bit the can he threw in the trash looks just like the can in the website

    He pulled out (in a cloud of foggy white smoke) and me and another dude were kind of making fun of him.. Neither one of us heard of this stuff before

    I dont know.... sounds like a good way to burn up an engine to me. Anyone hear of this gunk?

    Not sure that Id ever put it in my vehicles
    Faster than a bullet from a gun
    He is faster than everyone
    Quicker than the blinking of an eye
    Like a flash you could miss him going by
    No one knows quite how he does it but it's true they say
    He's the master of going faster. -George Harrison

  2. #2
    Professor Fatbot
    Join Date
    Apr 2003
    Location
    Edmonton, AB
    Posts
    3,479
    You suck it in through a vacuum line like your brake booster line. It's basically mineral spirits and rubbing alcohol, and it gets into the carbon in your combustion chambers and breaks it down by getting very hot.

    I would never add it to oil or fuel but if you have an engine so carboned up it's knocking, GM even sells it at their delearships as Top Engine Cleaner and uses it in Cadillacs as a dealer-done procedure much the same way.
    "I kill for the code to disarm this mess..."

  3. #3
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    Houghton/Hancock, MI
    Posts
    15,984
    A friend of mine swears by that stuff. Makes a bunch of white smoke. He claims his old Mercedes wouldn't pass emissions check, not close, according to his garage man who tested it. So he used a can of sea foam and says his mechanic told him it was now within limits and he took it through the official and passed. He says he did that on another vehicle as well, claims the key is to get the engine plenty hot before using the sea foam.

    I tried it on two different beaters. I never noticed that it did anything at all. I never knew what the heck was in it either, so I didn't try it again.
    Got to watch out for those Libertarians - they want to take over the government and leave everyone alone!

  4. #4
    Member #66 jandj's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2000
    Location
    Williamsburg,Va USA
    Posts
    7,577
    We used it in the shop as a preventative , never had anything we put it in smoke, but then none of our stuff is tee-totally worn slap out!
    We put it in everything from cars to heavy equipment, no problems caused by it..that we know of.
    I have "heard" noticeable positive results from some of the vehicles we used it in as a fuel treatment.
    "Duty is the most sublime word in our language. Do your duty in all things. You cannot do more, you should never wish to do less" - R.E.Lee

  5. #5
    SeaFoam is gold to those of us who ride vintage motorcycles. If the CV carbs get a little fouled, chances are Seafoam will clear it. Beats pulling them out, tearing them down and putting them all back together again.

    An old timer neighbor of mine has an '04 Suzuki Burgman with a throttle body primitive fuel injection system, and was getting a stumble. He ran some seafoam on my suggestion this week and it cleared right up.

    I don't think it would have much value in a modern fuel injected car, with finicky emission systems, but if you ride/drive something a bit older with a carb it can be an excellent addition to the fluid shelf.

  6. #6
    Is Bat Boy KevMcNJ's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2002
    Location
    South Carolina, USA :10 hours from Indy, 80 minutes from Darlington, & 7 hours from Disney World
    Posts
    19,706
    Interesting reading thanx to all. The way this guy was talking it was a semi regualr event for him and the JAg didnt look that old

  7. #7
    Professor Fatbot
    Join Date
    Apr 2003
    Location
    Edmonton, AB
    Posts
    3,479
    Certain engines really like to carbon up because they are fairly high performance engines that get tooled around town instead of opened up. The Cadillac Northstar is a particular victim.

    http://video.google.com/videoplay?do...90865726229173

    Here is their video for usage. All of their products are basically the same thing but packaged differently. I would never put it in oil, but for cleaning the carbon out of a motor nothing beats it.

  8. #8
    Insider
    Join Date
    Apr 2004
    Location
    Elmira, Taiwan, Elmira...
    Posts
    10,897
    I have a 2009 JCW MINI and the use of Sea Foam has been discussed many times on the forums. I had never heard of it before buying the MINI, but it would fall into the "high performance engine driven on the street" category.

  9. #9
    It has been around the marine industry for years and has been called everything from top engine cleaner to tune up in a can. It works well to remove carbon buildup and deposits and is a very good penetrating oil. But there is no reason to run it through a perfectly fine engine unless there is a suspected problem. It has a specific purpose, it isn't a cure-all or preventative maintenance.

  10. #10
    Insider
    Join Date
    Jul 2002
    Location
    Cypress, Texas
    Posts
    3,241
    Fifty years ago my dad's version of this treatment was a small soft drink bottle filled with water.

    I guess an atomizing sprayer would have worked as well. Dad's procedure was the drizzle method.

  11. #11
    pops
    Join Date
    Jun 2001
    Location
    Chicago Suburbs
    Posts
    6,089
    Seems generally popular amongst the motorcycle set, but I have never used it myself on my bikes.

  12. #12
    Professor Fatbot
    Join Date
    Apr 2003
    Location
    Edmonton, AB
    Posts
    3,479
    Quote Originally Posted by Taxpayer View Post
    Fifty years ago my dad's version of this treatment was a small soft drink bottle filled with water.

    I guess an atomizing sprayer would have worked as well. Dad's procedure was the drizzle method.
    This is somewhat safer because it easily evaporates and is combustible, you accidentally get a slug of water in an engine and you've made a very expensive mistake.

  13. #13
    Registered User milliesdad's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2010
    Location
    a state of Vicodin-induced confusion
    Posts
    1,235
    It's the greatest thing since canned beer.
    "If there are no dogs in Heaven, when I die I want to go where they go" Mark Twain

  14. #14
    Fake Shemp
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    NW Indiana
    Posts
    1,564
    I've used it a bunch with positive results, I know some good mechanics that swear by it.
    "Man does not control his own fate. The women in his life do that for him." Groucho Marx

  15. #15
    I've got a '95 S-10 that the previous owner drove hard and put away wet. The EGR valve was clogged up, and the truck was running progressively worse.

    I've seen miracles in a can come and go in my life, but I now swear by Seafoam.

    If you want to stretch your nickels and dimes, you can make the stuff yourself. Google is your friend.

  16. #16
    Unregistered User pb's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Missouri
    Posts
    3,868
    I used it once in my wife's old Tracker. I put it in with a full tank and the engine spewed and sputtered and finally cut off. After a few nervous seconds I turned it over again and it ran smooth as could be. Just wish the bottle it comes in was a bit easier to navigate into the gas tank. Gotta have a funnel handy, if I recall correctly.
    No man can cause more grief than that one clinging blindly to the vices of his ancestors. - William Faulker

  17. #17
    Insider FTHurley's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    Boston, MA
    Posts
    9,401
    I think it was developed by OMC originally. My folks use is at their shop on outboard motors to counteract the effect of ethanol on the carbs. In cases where you might not want to do a carb job, but it's not quite idling, it can clear out that little bit of gelatinous gunk.

  18. #18
    Great for removing carbon, deposits gunk and grime but it isn't a miracle in a can. I have an S-10 in the shop right now with a clogged converter.

    SeaFoam will not save that!

  19. #19
    Registered User BadazzZ06's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    San Rafael, CA
    Posts
    2,341
    SeaFoam is not legal in California. It may not be in other states ...

    http://www.arb.ca.gov/enf/casesett/sea.htm

  20. #20
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    Houghton/Hancock, MI
    Posts
    15,984
    Above their limit on volatile organic compounds. No wonder the stuff works better.

  21. #21
    Is Bat Boy KevMcNJ's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2002
    Location
    South Carolina, USA :10 hours from Indy, 80 minutes from Darlington, & 7 hours from Disney World
    Posts
    19,706
    Quote Originally Posted by Indy'sGhosts View Post
    Great for removing carbon, deposits gunk and grime but it isn't a miracle in a can. I have an S-10 in the shop right now with a clogged converter.

    SeaFoam will not save that!
    Anyone else here remember those Catlytic converter "test kits" you used to be able to buy in any parts house?

    It was just a piece of exhaust pipe you were supposed to install in the section where the converter went. You could then tell if it was clogged or not by simply running the vehicle

    And then you would run out and buy the new $3oo converter and remove the test kit. Or not

    I dont think stores are allowed to sell them any longer.

    I doubt newer cars would run all that good w/o the converter in place these days anyhow

    Computers and sensors would all go into cardiac arrest I bet

  22. #22
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    Houghton/Hancock, MI
    Posts
    15,984
    My Dad was pretty quick to cut out the catalytic converters when they were a new thing. He blamed them for every time the cars ran poorly, lol. A friend of mine was disturbed, "but he's poisoning the air!" I was like, "what do you want me to do about it, turn him in?"

  23. #23
    Registered User Jag-lover's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2002
    Location
    Vienna VA USA
    Posts
    7,088
    Over on the Jaguar board I frequent Seafoam is generally considered to be not worth it. The problems with the various sensors and the like make it somewhat problematic to use, at least on a newer engine. For an injector cleaner, Techron works fairly well in keeping the injector nozzles working properly. For those engines with fuel injection, cleaning out the throttle body is fairly easy and results can generally be felt.

  24. #24
    Registered User BadazzZ06's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    San Rafael, CA
    Posts
    2,341
    Quote Originally Posted by KevMcNJ View Post
    Anyone else here remember those Catlytic converter "test kits" you used to be able to buy in any parts house?

    It was just a piece of exhaust pipe you were supposed to install in the section where the converter went. You could then tell if it was clogged or not by simply running the vehicle

    And then you would run out and buy the new $3oo converter and remove the test kit. Or not

    I dont think stores are allowed to sell them any longer.

    I doubt newer cars would run all that good w/o the converter in place these days anyhow

    Computers and sensors would all go into cardiac arrest I bet
    For a while you could buy O2 (oxygen) sensor "simulators" to plug into an exhaust system to "fool" the engine management computer into thinking you still had catalytic converter(s) even though you removed them. The California and Federal EPA got wise to this and several companies were basically "put out of business" by the Federal EPA ....

    http://www.epa.gov/Compliance/resour...aa/casper.html

    If you remove the catalyst(s) from a car made after 1996, it will throw a P0420 and (if equipped) a P0430 DTC in the engine management computer. I don't know about other states, but here in Cali, if either of these codes are set it is an automatic failure of the smog test, and you can't register (or renew) your license plate until the problem is fixed. Here in Cali, the smog inspector is also REQUIRED to visually inspect to make sure that the catalyst(s) are on the vehicle.

    The good news is that the sophisticated engine management systems today can give us great power, and do it without polluting the air to any significant degree. Cutting out the catalyst today really gains you nothing.

  25. #25
    Registered User Jag-lover's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2002
    Location
    Vienna VA USA
    Posts
    7,088
    Quote Originally Posted by BadazzZ06 View Post
    For a while you could buy O2 (oxygen) sensor "simulators" to plug into an exhaust system to "fool" the engine management computer into thinking you still had catalytic converter(s) even though you removed them. The California and Federal EPA got wise to this and several companies were basically "put out of business" by the Federal EPA ....

    http://www.epa.gov/Compliance/resour...aa/casper.html

    If you remove the catalyst(s) from a car made after 1996, it will throw a P0420 and (if equipped) a P0430 DTC in the engine management computer. I don't know about other states, but here in Cali, if either of these codes are set it is an automatic failure of the smog test, and you can't register (or renew) your license plate until the problem is fixed. Here in Cali, the smog inspector is also REQUIRED to visually inspect to make sure that the catalyst(s) are on the vehicle.

    The good news is that the sophisticated engine management systems today can give us great power, and do it without polluting the air to any significant degree. Cutting out the catalyst today really gains you nothing.
    In the state of VA you have to get your vehicle emissions tested every two years. The test consists of an OBDII test and a two speed emissions test with a sensor in the vehicle's tailpipe.

    There are high-flow CATS available that produce good results in conjunction with an ECU upgrade. These can be a little pricey though depending on your vehicle.

  26. #26
    Registered User BadazzZ06's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    San Rafael, CA
    Posts
    2,341
    Quote Originally Posted by Jag-lover View Post
    In the state of VA you have to get your vehicle emissions tested every two years. The test consists of an OBDII test and a two speed emissions test with a sensor in the vehicle's tailpipe.

    There are high-flow CATS available that produce good results in conjunction with an ECU upgrade. These can be a little pricey though depending on your vehicle.
    Pretty much the same test here in Cali ... a sniffer in the tailpipe, 2 speeds, and a connection to the OBD port. When the test is completed (and passed) the test machine connects to the CA DMV computer system and reports the VIN and test results.

    If there are ANY aftermarket parts on the engine or its intake/exhaust systems (headers, cool air intake, high flow cats, modified fuel or ignition system .... WHATEVER ....) the owner of the vehicle must show the smog station the California "EO sticker" for the part(s). No sticker, no pass. I'm not aware of any hi-fllow cats that have qualified for an EO number. Basically here in Cali cats have to be OEM or absolutely OEM equivalent. High flows are not allowed.

    http://www.arb.ca.gov/msprog/aftermk...es/amquery.php

  27. #27
    No testing here, but we had it annually when I lived in BC. At that time, if you had an AWD vehicle, you were exempt from the running test, as the test platform wasn't equiped to handle more than 2 drive wheels. Not sure if it still is that way.
    Asked how he’d like to be remembered were he hit by a bus tomorrow, Tracy doesn’t hesitate: “I’m a race-car driver. At the last second, I’d swerve and avoid the bus.”

  28. #28
    Is Bat Boy KevMcNJ's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2002
    Location
    South Carolina, USA :10 hours from Indy, 80 minutes from Darlington, & 7 hours from Disney World
    Posts
    19,706
    I had a buddy 20 years ago that had a little Mercury Capri with the smog stuff all removed. Lucky for him his dad was a mechanic. When it was due for inspection his dad would stick the sniffer in the nearest new car that was in his shop that day.

    Something tells me that wouldnt fly in 2010

  29. #29
    Registered User BadazzZ06's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    San Rafael, CA
    Posts
    2,341
    Quote Originally Posted by sightlines View Post
    No testing here, but we had it annually when I lived in BC. At that time, if you had an AWD vehicle, you were exempt from the running test, as the test platform wasn't equiped to handle more than 2 drive wheels. Not sure if it still is that way.
    Yup, vehicles (like an Audi A4 for example) that have AWD are exempt from the running part of the test. They still get the sniffer, but are tested only at engine idle.

    Also, if you have vehicles equipped with traction control, and/or any form of "stability" control, they often have problems as the mix of spinning and non-spinning wheels often confuses the crap out of the electronic systems. Sometimes to the point of causing the computer to think there is a fault in the system, turning on warning lamp(s) and usually disabling the system until the dealer resets it. Check your owner's manual if it will be your first time on a dyno style tester. I have a buddy who didn't check his manual, and had his Mercedes sedan freak out on the rollers. Dealer charged him about $200.00 to reset the system, which was a total rip-off as it took them all of 3 minutes to do it.

  30. #30
    Registered User Jag-lover's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2002
    Location
    Vienna VA USA
    Posts
    7,088
    Do the examiners tell you to run the test with the systems off? On my Jaguar there is a switch to turn the DSC (Dynamic Stability Control) off but the default is to run with it on. I assume most other cars with similar systems have this capability. I've had my car go thru the test once and so far it passed easily. Not sure if the examiner ran with the DSC on or not.

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •