ok, i will give some background.
When you have a very dirty engine, or acually, just an engine that didnt have very regular oil changed (like, maby every 7,000 miles) your engine would be worn down more than one with an oil change every 3,000 miles, right? Right. All of this stuff that is worn down will now have sludge in it taking up space. When you put the seafoam in your car, you take that sludge out, and guess what happens? your engine wears down alot, real quick.
Is what im saying true? My car has 93,000 miles on it, and i can tell that it hasnt had regular oil changes (my dads impala and my car have the same ammount of miles on it since last oil change (500 mi) and his car's oil is ALOT cleaner than mine)
Here is another explanation of what im trying to say:
I have a motorized scooter, and it has a small gearbox. We decided to change the gear oil in it, and when we were pouring it out, there was ALOT of metal flake in it. We put new gear oil in (which would simulate cleaning the engine out with seafoam) and the scooter made it about 100 ft. before the gears acually grinded up and locked the gearbox up. This SAME thing happened to my dads friend, he changed the tranny oil, and 2 weeks later his tranny went out of it.
What is happening (with the scooter anyways) is that there was so much metal in the gearbox, that no more could come out... so it was fine (which would be the sludge in the engine) when we changed the gear oil, it opens a TON of space and let the gears just grind themself to pieces.
In my eyes, seafoam would do the same thing, ecept that the metal would be the sludge, and the new gear oil would be the seafoam cleaning out the oil.
so, can i have some responses on this?
When you have a very dirty engine, or acually, just an engine that didnt have very regular oil changed (like, maby every 7,000 miles) your engine would be worn down more than one with an oil change every 3,000 miles, right? Right. All of this stuff that is worn down will now have sludge in it taking up space. When you put the seafoam in your car, you take that sludge out, and guess what happens? your engine wears down alot, real quick.
Is what im saying true? My car has 93,000 miles on it, and i can tell that it hasnt had regular oil changes (my dads impala and my car have the same ammount of miles on it since last oil change (500 mi) and his car's oil is ALOT cleaner than mine)
Here is another explanation of what im trying to say:
I have a motorized scooter, and it has a small gearbox. We decided to change the gear oil in it, and when we were pouring it out, there was ALOT of metal flake in it. We put new gear oil in (which would simulate cleaning the engine out with seafoam) and the scooter made it about 100 ft. before the gears acually grinded up and locked the gearbox up. This SAME thing happened to my dads friend, he changed the tranny oil, and 2 weeks later his tranny went out of it.
What is happening (with the scooter anyways) is that there was so much metal in the gearbox, that no more could come out... so it was fine (which would be the sludge in the engine) when we changed the gear oil, it opens a TON of space and let the gears just grind themself to pieces.
In my eyes, seafoam would do the same thing, ecept that the metal would be the sludge, and the new gear oil would be the seafoam cleaning out the oil.
so, can i have some responses on this?
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