Fine Mist

Posted on Saturday, September 19th, 2009 at 11:50 am

does it burn or damage the pistons of an engine if I hold a medium speed while spraying a fine mist of water?

Consumer? I was told that this is another method of cleaning carbon out of the piston and others. awnsers some good here. my father always done on all vehicles and he had a drink pronlem. Water works best if you have tried both. youll see and to smell the exhaust after each test. lock is possible but I guess I didn't say that my expierance mech and it might look like I could try to dump more than a fog or not to run a high speed enough. across it will not be clean by the admission that it is only water. how it will not always compress ad a certian extent and bust out of carbon and what not. we used to start our F 18 and F 14 aircraft and the spray water to our engines gas turbine. moral or story. try it yourself. lol. I am looking for info on the highly technical subject of constructors of engines or any type ASE qualled person. Remember kids water is hydrogen and oxygen both H2O can burn! it is very very unstable.

It is an old school method or deception as one might call it. As liquids can not be compressed, the act of putting water intake by an engine has a theoretical capacity to dislodge carbon deposits accumulated. But it may be harmful on hot engines. The modern method is to go buy a can of injector cleaner than you put into your fuel tank. It is much more safe and as long as you spend more than $ 4.00 in a store at low prices, it will be good. The other part of this is that modern engines during the correct execution does not have much if carbon deposits, even after 150.000 miles. The deposits found today are more related to the combustion process. The advent of synthetic oils and detergent gasoline have created rather than hard deposits plain water will have little effect or not. You need to look for cleaners that have a high concentration of Techron in them. If you have problems with plug fouling, you need to find someone who can still (READ) a candle and say the deposits are due.


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