BigChiefSmokem
Founding Member
stangman16 said:Good deal! I'm going to make sure I have my chevy friends behind me when I do this - Eat my dust! (lol)
Did my write up help anyone understand it better?
stangman16 said:Good deal! I'm going to make sure I have my chevy friends behind me when I do this - Eat my dust! (lol)
03 Black GT said:oh yeah i forgot to ask this. When you pour it in your fuel tank, do you mean like with the gas, and do you use the same amount of seafoam (about 1/3 to 1/2 the bottle)? and also how long do you let it your car sit if you only do it this way?
Anyone just tried it through the fuel tank and not the pvc valve?
I'll try to go buy a can tomorrow and video it. I don't blame you asking for a video...I tried 3 times before I got it right. That was a waste of a good half-can of SeafoamSMRcalidiv said:ttt for someone to post a complete video of the procedure or detailed pics....quick question though...i used the seafoam awhile ago through the tank and i could tell a difference, since then i got new heads, would i notice any change now, the car has a lot of miles except for the heads, thoughts????
Probably not, unless your engine was cleaned from head to toe inside when you swapped the heads.SMRcalidiv said:and what about the new heads? think itll make a diff?
SMRcalidiv said:ttt for someone to post a complete video of the procedure or detailed pics....quick question though...i used the seafoam awhile ago through the tank and i could tell a difference, since then i got new heads, would i notice any change now, the car has a lot of miles except for the heads, thoughts????
When you put it in your crank case is when you change your oil. There are 3 ways to use Seafoam on our cars: upper intake, fuel tank, and crank case. Each one does something different.03 Black GT said:when you put it in the fuel tank how much gas did you have in there? Also how long did you let it sit after putting it in and did you change your oil afterward???