Jayceesfolly Posted October 29, 2015 #1 Posted October 29, 2015 Here are two videos of a seafoam test. Interesting results. He also did a test using Lucas cleaner and Techron cleaner, but I have not reviewed them yet. Jim
steamer Posted October 29, 2015 #2 Posted October 29, 2015 What he didn't talk about is how well the stuff also cleans out the fuel system. When I worked at a John Deere dealer the shop would fix many lawn mowers that were hard starting or running rough with sea foam. It worked about 80% of the time.
Great adVENTURE Posted October 29, 2015 #3 Posted October 29, 2015 I was skeptical but ran a half bottle thru my 07 RSMV and it made a noticeable difference for me with throttle response and acceleration. I knew the bike was sitting when I bought it from the previous owner in July of this year. I felt the bike was sluggish especially when two up and noticed some fuel dripping from the tubes under the bike when I stopped from a ride. I'm thinking the bowls were gummed up some and maybe something else was going on but now after another half bottle everything is golden. For the $11 price tag and the fact my parts store was doing buy on get one 50% off I figured it couldn't hurt. So glad I did it.
dave_wells Posted October 29, 2015 #4 Posted October 29, 2015 Menards had Seafoam for 6.98. The website still list it 6.98. We have a bunch of them in Ohio I have never noticed a higher price from them. I have also purchased it on Amazon.com for the same price I cleaned out a 20 year old snow blower with the stuff last fall The thing has not run this good since I purchased it in 1995
H2O Posted October 29, 2015 #5 Posted October 29, 2015 My experience has been good with it. I used to put Sta-Bil in the tanks of the seasonal and other equipment until several years ago when I happened to open up a fuel tank on a generator after about 4 weeks and saw what looked like blobs of something floating in the gasoline!! Checked another tank and saw the same thing. Was it a bad batch of Sta-Bil? I don't know but I quit using it. I've been putting and running a little SeaFoam through my equipment before storing, at my shop and at home for about 5 years now and haven't had any issues with start-up or separation since. :2cents::2cents::2cents:
WildBill1 Posted October 29, 2015 #6 Posted October 29, 2015 Does Seafoam work? Does a Bear have a climbing gear?
chag67 Posted October 29, 2015 #7 Posted October 29, 2015 How much Sea Foam do you put in a full tank of gas in a 2nd gen RSV?
Flyinfool Posted October 29, 2015 #8 Posted October 29, 2015 It depends on if you are putting it in for maintenance or to fix a problem. For maintenance follow the directions on the can. If you are trying to get the goo out of something, people have used anything from a half can of SF to a full tank of gas up to a full can to a half tank of gas. depends on how bad your problem is.
Freebird Posted October 29, 2015 #10 Posted October 29, 2015 I use a full can for a tank of gas about twice a year.
KIC Posted October 29, 2015 #11 Posted October 29, 2015 My experience has been good with it. I used to put Sta-Bil in the tanks of the seasonal and other equipment until several years ago when I happened to open up a fuel tank on a generator after about 4 weeks and saw what looked like blobs of something floating in the gasoline!! Checked another tank and saw the same thing. Was it a bad batch of Sta-Bil? I don't know but I quit using it. I've been putting and running a little SeaFoam through my equipment before storing, at my shop and at home for about 5 years now and haven't had any issues with start-up or separation since. :2cents::2cents::2cents: I have a friend that restores expensive old sports cars. He is adamant that Stabil will cause problems if left in a tank for storage. He didn't have much to say about Seafoam since he doesn't use any preservative any more. He will just drain all gas until the vehicle needs fresh gas. SeaFoam has helped me on my 89. When I first bought mine and it had been sitting, I disconnected the fuel line to the pump ( plugging the tank line), attached a longer piece of hose to the pump and wired it up by the seat. I attached a small funnel into he hose end. Using the drain screws on each carb, I emptied the bowls of the carbs and then filled the hose with a 50/50 mixture off SeaFoam and gas. By cycling the fuel pump I was able to fill the bowls with the mixture. Let the bowls sit several days. Then I drained the bowls to check the seaFoam mixture for color or contaminants. I then filled them again while running the bike and filling the funnel gas line. If I recall correctly, it blew a lot of white smoke out the tail pipes, so have your garage door opened. Another thing you can do is drain all the bowls and then back flush the bowls using a can of Techron carb cleaner, squirting it up through the drain tubes and ten close the drain screw. Let that sit for a day or so and then drain. When squirting the cleaner, make sure that you put a rag over the connection off the little red straw and the bowl drain hose. It will squirt back and usually right into your eyes.
Yammer Dan Posted October 30, 2015 #12 Posted October 30, 2015 I have a friend that restores expensive old sports cars. He is adamant that Stabil will cause problems if left in a tank for storage. He didn't have much to say about Seafoam since he doesn't use any preservative any more. He will just drain all gas until the vehicle needs fresh gas. SeaFoam has helped me on my 89. When I first bought mine and it had been sitting, I disconnected the fuel line to the pump ( plugging the tank line), attached a longer piece of hose to the pump and wired it up by the seat. I attached a small funnel into he hose end. Using the drain screws on each carb, I emptied the bowls of the carbs and then filled the hose with a 50/50 mixture off SeaFoam and gas. By cycling the fuel pump I was able to fill the bowls with the mixture. Let the bowls sit several days. Then I drained the bowls to check the seaFoam mixture for color or contaminants. I then filled them again while running the bike and filling the funnel gas line. If I recall correctly, it blew a lot of white smoke out the tail pipes, so have your garage door opened. Another thing you can do is drain all the bowls and then back flush the bowls using a can of Techron carb cleaner, squirting it up through the drain tubes and ten close the drain screw. Let that sit for a day or so and then drain. When squirting the cleaner, make sure that you put a rag over the connection off the little red straw and the bowl drain hose. It will squirt back and usually right into your eyes. :sign yeah that::sign yeah that::sign yeah that:
BlueSky Posted October 30, 2015 #13 Posted October 30, 2015 When I had my Yamaha OX66 serviced at the dealer, they were adamant about not using the red Stabil in an outboard. Told me to be sure to use the blue marine Stabil. Said the red stuff would cause problems. Using alcohol free gas means a lot too if it sits a while.
Great adVENTURE Posted October 30, 2015 #14 Posted October 30, 2015 Everything is more expensive in New Jersey
Yammer Dan Posted October 30, 2015 #15 Posted October 30, 2015 I have a friend that restores expensive old sports cars. He is adamant that Stabil will cause problems if left in a tank for storage. He didn't have much to say about Seafoam since he doesn't use any preservative any more. He will just drain all gas until the vehicle needs fresh gas. SeaFoam has helped me on my 89. When I first bought mine and it had been sitting, I disconnected the fuel line to the pump ( plugging the tank line), attached a longer piece of hose to the pump and wired it up by the seat. I attached a small funnel into he hose end. Using the drain screws on each carb, I emptied the bowls of the carbs and then filled the hose with a 50/50 mixture off SeaFoam and gas. By cycling the fuel pump I was able to fill the bowls with the mixture. Let the bowls sit several days. Then I drained the bowls to check the seaFoam mixture for color or contaminants. I then filled them again while running the bike and filling the funnel gas line. If I recall correctly, it blew a lot of white smoke out the tail pipes, so have your garage door opened. Another thing you can do is drain all the bowls and then back flush the bowls using a can of Techron carb cleaner, squirting it up through the drain tubes and ten close the drain screw. Let that sit for a day or so and then drain. When squirting the cleaner, make sure that you put a rag over the connection off the little red straw and the bowl drain hose. It will squirt back and usually right into your eyes. :sign yeah that::sign yeah that::sign yeah that:
Ride2much Posted October 30, 2015 #16 Posted October 30, 2015 Seafoam,I call it bike geritol. It saved my 86 from a carb rebuild!
dave_wells Posted October 30, 2015 #17 Posted October 30, 2015 [ATTACH=CONFIG]102182[/ATTACH]Everything is more expensive in New Jersey Try shopping online Amazon Seafoam I just cant bring myself to pay 11.00 for a bottle unless it is to fix a problem. Same reason I stopped using Plexus to clean my windshield.
gorski Posted October 30, 2015 #18 Posted October 30, 2015 When added to the tank does it cause the engine to smoke like in the lawn mower demo??? How much should you use for a general cleaning and then for maintenance??
Max Posted October 30, 2015 #19 Posted October 30, 2015 Same reason I stopped using Plexus to clean my windshield. Seafoam ... and talk about price gouging, picked up first can of Plexus in 012 at 11$, same can, same shop today 30$. Use sparingly.
XV1100SE Posted October 30, 2015 #20 Posted October 30, 2015 Seafoam in Canada is $13. Add 25% to convert to U.S. $
camos Posted October 31, 2015 #21 Posted October 31, 2015 Seafoam in Canada is $13. Add 25% to convert to U.S. $Look at this: http://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/B0002JN2EU?psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=ox_sc_act_title_1&smid=A3DWYIK6Y9EEQB I'm getting to be a fan of Amazon for a number of common household items. Just sayin...
Yammer Dan Posted October 31, 2015 #22 Posted October 31, 2015 I keep Sea-Foam in reserve now for problems. For Maint. I use a good Diet of Marvel Mystery Oil. Marvel works fine to keep the fuel system clean. BerryMan's Chem Tech does a good job on really needed clean-ups. Find it at Wally World close to the Sea-Foam at a bunch less on the price. I don't like to use a Lot of the BerryMan's as it seems a harsher cleaner but for really needed cleaning it is great. Give it a shock treatment of BerryMan's and then keep it purring with the Marvel Mystery.
Patmac6075 Posted November 1, 2015 #23 Posted November 1, 2015 First off I am not an employee of SeaFoam, but I have worked with their R&D department and with numerous reps.....SeaFoam makes 5 products and 4 of them are basically the same thing only in different concentrations SeaFoam, SeaFoam aerosol, TransTune, and DeepCreep (BugsBgone is not related to the other products in any way). 1. SeaFoam and the aerosol version are exactly the same stuff except one is liquid and one is an aerosol. 2. TransTune is about 4X the concentration of normal SeaFoam with the addition of some detergents and a red dye. TransTune is fine to run through your engine just as SeaFoam, just use less... 3. DeepCreep, is the same make up as regular SeaFoam only at about 10X the concentration....DeepCreep is one of the best penetrating fluids you can buy...it also has the added benefit of not "flashing" on hot surfaces, you can heat a bolt until it's cherry red, hit it with DeepCreep and it will not flame...it actually helps the product creep into the seized areas. One difference between SeaFoam and Sta-bil is Sta-bil creates a paraffin barrier on top of you gas to keep it from evaporating......once that barrier is disturbed (say if you move your mower or bump your bike), Sta-bil losses it effectiveness. Finally, think of SeaFoam as kind of like Windex....if your window just need a normal cleaning Windex does a great job....but if your window is shattered, it won't matter how much Windex you use, the window needs repair. And one last thing, SeaFoam is great for use with diesels, just don't use TransTune in your diesel fuel...the red color will make your diesel fuel the same color as the "not for highway" diesel.
flyday58 Posted November 1, 2015 #24 Posted November 1, 2015 Haven't I read a bunch of posts about Seafoam fouling plugs? Or is that some other additive? Or does it depend on how much you use?
bongobobny Posted November 1, 2015 #25 Posted November 1, 2015 The seafoam does not foul the plugs in itself, but in some cases the crud it breaks loose can foul plugs...
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