Tried the suck up water into manifold trick...
Filled a 2 litre with water, got some hose, unplugged the vac connection at the UIM for the purge valve solenoid, revved it up and dropped the hose in... took a few minutes of high revving and bogging to get it all through, didn't see anything come out the back end and i'm not sure if it made any difference or not, oh well worth the effort eh?
|
Wow.... Thats uh lota water... how long did it take to suck it all down?
|
What is it for, call me a noob but i've never heard of this before.
|
supposedly it's the best method to clean the carbon out of the engine (think steam cleaning, water introduced to fast moving engine with hot combustion temps)
took about 3-4 minutes to ingest it all |
Got it, thats pritty cool. Its not damaging in anyway, or is there going to be a yes and a no from everyone?
|
everyone seems to agree it's safe, very natural way to produce cleanliness
|
That does seem like a lot of water.
|
that much sounds crazy. water is incompressible, thus water in chamber increases compression ratio by that amount.. and steam just raises pressures more.
|
Just FYI: using water (steam vapor) to clean out carbon deposits in the combustion chamber will take a lot longer than "revving the car for a few minutes".
|
Originally Posted by Julian
that much sounds crazy. water is incompressible, thus water in chamber increases compression ratio by that amount.. and steam just raises pressures more.
EDIT: I do think that the practice of simply feeding water into the intake tract via vacuum to "clean out the engine" is a waste of time. |
Originally Posted by Kento
As long as there is still combustion taking place, there isn't near enough water present in the combustion chamber to have any effect on the compression ratio. Same for the "steam raising pressures"; there isn't near enough being produced to have any effect.
EDIT: I do think that the practice of simply feeding water into the intake tract via vacuum to "clean out the engine" is a waste of time. |
Originally Posted by BoostFrenzy
everyone seems to agree it's safe
Yeah, I have never heard of anything breaking from sucking water into the engine, but some are afraid of a large carbon chunk breaking off and damaging the turbos. Personally I just make sure to redline the engine everytime I take it out. :bigthumb: It sure is the most fun way to clean carbon from your engine. |
I've seen many mechanics use the water method with success.
At first I was scratching my head when I saw this. |
well... haha water can hurt for a piston engine when they hydro lock......
|
Originally Posted by afterburn27
Yeah, I have never heard of anything breaking from sucking water into the engine, but some are afraid of a large carbon chunk breaking off and damaging the turbos.
Personally I just make sure to redline the engine everytime I take it out. :bigthumb: It sure is the most fun way to clean carbon from your engine. |
Tell this guy water never hurts anything. Now, on a rotary motor you would be looking out broken apex seals more then likely.
http://www.exileracing.com/gallery/hydrolocked/6g73.jpg |
haha, when they say "a healthy gulp" they are talking about a lot more water than can be sucked through a small vacuum nipple like we are talking about here.
edit: Any specifics on how he did that? |
Letting the engine inhale water through a vacuum line is not going to cause hydraulic lock for the simple fact that is would be impossible for the engine to ingest an amount of water large enough to completely fill the chamber. If you have a running engine and submerge the entire inlet then you're looking for trouble, but letting the engine suck water through a 1/4" or so hose is not going to cause it to lock. Impossible.
|
Originally Posted by afterburn27
haha, when they say "a healthy gulp" they are talking about a lot more water than can be sucked through a small vacuum nipple like we are talking about here.
edit: Any specifics on how he did that? He was going off roading in a stream that was pretty damn deep. |
waste of time
|
I might have to use the water method for warranty work ;)
|
You can't compare piston engines to rotaries for this particular procedure. That is total apples-to-oranges comparison.
Rob Golden from Pineapple was the main tech speaker at Sevenstock last year. He talked about dumping a 2 liter bottle of water into your rotary while it running at around 4k RPM. I am personally scared to try this myself, but Rob is one of the most respected builders in the industry. Do you think he'd stand up at a rotary specific event in front of many rotor heads and tell them to do something that would kill their engines? Sonny |
I never once said how much it would take to destroy a rotary motor. Don't take what i posted out of context. And im not comparing Rotaries to Piston engines.. Don't start one of the debates. I was merly showing what water does to an engine based off of this statement.
"Yeah, I have never heard of anything breaking from sucking water into the engine, but some are afraid of a large carbon chunk breaking off and damaging the turbos." |
Also, Rotary combustion walls and rotor faces are thicker than piston face and wear sleeves.
|
Read the top post on this page.
Originally Posted by RX7Wishing
Tell this guy water never hurts anything. Now, on a rotary motor you would be looking out broken apex seals more then likely.
Sonny |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 06:51 PM. |
© 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands