any advantages to premix and keeping the omp?
Originally Posted by gerbraldy
One advantage of premix is you get your engined oil'd immediately when you start your car.
-=Russ=-
Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 6,598
Likes: 10
From: Temple, Texas (Central)
Originally Posted by Syonyk
The general consensus that I've seen:
You can get adapter plates that use the MOP and instead of drawing from the crankcase draw from a separate tank that you fill with 2-stroke oil. This is sort of a "Best of both worlds" - no premixing in the gas tank, but still burning an oil designed to be burned.
-=Russ=-
You can get adapter plates that use the MOP and instead of drawing from the crankcase draw from a separate tank that you fill with 2-stroke oil. This is sort of a "Best of both worlds" - no premixing in the gas tank, but still burning an oil designed to be burned.
-=Russ=-
i wish there was a way to convert the s5 mop to a s4, my reasoning behind this is im betting the s4 one is more liberal with how much oil it injects (when the throttle body opens it yanks the mop open)and the more oil the longer the engine will run. the s5 one takes into account alot of info and injects based on that but for better emmissions it limits the oil injected compared to the s4. also the s5 one is almost a reason to sell a car b/c when it goes bad like mine did it will fry the ecu and set you back quite a bit of money to replace the two items. without the proper resources you could end up paying almost 1500 bucks to replace those at the dealer...
i know i read this in some place in this web site that there is something u can use to clean up the carbon build up but that is like a last thing u want to try cuz it can **** up ur seals or something like that. why is carbon build up so bad? i know it robs power and stuff i have seen it kill more then half the power on a piston engine but we just added something called engine restorer and it clean it up good
Carbon buildup on a rotary is particularly bad for a few reasons.
1. It increases compression. This is good, except increased compression increases the risk of detonation. Detonation kills a rotary.
2. It can come off. A chunk of carbon coming loose inside a boinger *usually* doesn't do much damage, if any. It rattles around until it breaks up and heads out the exhaust valve. In a rotary, there's a much greater chance of it getting wedged somewhere, and ripping up an apex seal. Rebuild time.
-=Russ=-
1. It increases compression. This is good, except increased compression increases the risk of detonation. Detonation kills a rotary.
2. It can come off. A chunk of carbon coming loose inside a boinger *usually* doesn't do much damage, if any. It rattles around until it breaks up and heads out the exhaust valve. In a rotary, there's a much greater chance of it getting wedged somewhere, and ripping up an apex seal. Rebuild time.
-=Russ=-
Originally Posted by slidebabyslide
i know i read this in some place in this web site that there is something u can use to clean up the carbon build up but that is like a last thing u want to try cuz it can **** up ur seals or something like that. why is carbon build up so bad? i know it robs power and stuff i have seen it kill more then half the power on a piston engine but we just added something called engine restorer and it clean it up good
Water Trick
ATF
Carb Cleaner
The only one I'd try is the water trick.
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