Sea Foam Shock Treatment

TenMile

Well-Known Member
Thought this was worth posting for spring engine cleanup. For cleaning your Carbs/Jets and injectors, and getting the carbon out from the head/cylinders and plugs:

From the Hull Truth: dunk's decarbon method

This works for Carbed, EFI, Ficht, HPDI, Optimax and even 4 strokes...
First you need a separate small fuel tank. One of those 3 gal red Tempos works great or an empty gal milk jug will also work, but might be a bit messier..

I use Seafoam over the OEM stuff like OMC Engine Tuner or Merc Power Tune because in the last few years they changed the formula and you have to let them sit up 12 hours. Who's got time for that?? Seafoam you can buy from NAPA, CarQuest or other auto stores. Seafoam works in 15 mins.

You'll need 3/4 gal of gasoline and one 16oz can of seafoam for each engine. Don't forget to add 3oz of oil if you are premixing in a carbed engine. Use about 3 ft piece of fuel hose off the little tank. You connect this tank to your engine by pulling off the main tank fuel hose off the intake side of your water separating fuel filter and plug the hose off the small tank on to that fitting. Or you can separate the fuel line on the tank side primer ball, so you can still use your primer. If you have an engine that has fuel plug then you need a fuel plug on the little tanks hose.

Start the engine, let it warm up and start pulling the mix into the engine. You may have to increase the idle to keep it running once she get loaded with the Seafoam. Run the engine 15 mins in the dock or just cruising around under 2500. Then shut it down and let it sit for 15 mins. Restart the engine, the smoke you see is the carbon burning off. Do the whole thing again and let her sit again for 15 mins. If she smokes after the second time do it again, but I've never seen one still smoke after three doses. The gallon mix should be enough to do this 3 times. You don't need any wide open throttle, you don't need to change the plugs. If it's cleaning the combustion chambers it's also cleaning the plugs, but every 50-60hrs is good time to change plugs in most engines.

I cleaned a antique evinrude one time that had a 1/4" of solid carbon on the exhaust chamber walls by running a 1/2 gal of the mix through it. Seafoam has been around since the 30's and it's what they used when they were burning straight 4 stroke 40SAE oils in outboards.

You guys with the 4 strokes think you are immune from this? Those engines work 10 times as hard as any auto engine ever will and they will carbon up. I bought a Bronco two years ago that had 95,000 miles on it. When I used seafoam on it I had the neighbors hanging out of their front doors looking for where the fire was after I started it the first time there so much smoke.

Too many are under the assumption that it's totally the 2 stroke oil that causes the carbon, Wrong... it's also the additives they put in the fuels today. The carbon inhibitors in 2 stroke oil are there for this reason also. Remember when gasoline used to smell like gasoline, today it smells more like bad cologne.

For those guys that like to do the carbon treatment by spraying it down the carbs Seafoam also comes in spray can called Deep Creep. It's the same stuff under pressure. Says right on the can Oxygen Sensor Safe, for you Yam guys.

After that if your engine maunf recommends a daily additive treatment then do that in the mean time, but all 2 stroke outboard need decarboned every 50-60hrs. If I owned a 4 stroke I would do it the same. Once you are set up with the tank and hose the Seafoam is only 5-6 bucks can. It too easy not to do it
 
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Start the engine, let it warm up and start pulling the mix into the engine. You may have to increase the idle to keep it running once she get loaded with the Seafoam.

Question? Are you adding the mix to the gas can or is it like a spray going into the cylinders like fogging??
 
In the method above you add a full can of Sea Foam to a 1 gallon gas tank, and run your engine off that.

They also do make a Sea Foam spray you can spray into the carb. The Danger of spraying into the carb is you can over rev your engine and damage it.
 
The yanks have been using it for decades (right Charlie ?)
I question using it on a good running motor though .
would be interested to know the results.

Have you tried it out Terry ?
 
Going to give it a try this weekend. Kicker is running a little rough and has a dirty carb. Will let you know how it turns out.
 
I bought a can last year but just haven't worked up the courage to run any through my new F150 and T8. I know lots of folks use it all the time but I still not convinced.
 
Gave it a go today with great success. Kicker had been running rough, was stalling at idle and shaking pretty good. I figure it is a dirty carb as I've not run the engine for a couple of weeks. Worked it as described above -- full can of Sea Foam into a 1 Gallon tank. Ran a hose from the primer bulb into the portable tank. Let the engine warm up first on regular fuel. Switched to the Sea Foam fuel and let the boat run -- it ran rough for a minute or two and stalled out. Let it sit for 5 minutes, started it up. Burped some smoke initially but then ran. I then let it run under load by putting it in gear in the water at the dock for about 20 minutes at about 3/4 throttle. Turned the engine off and let it sit. Started it and ran it through again for 15, and let it sit again for 30 minutes. Disconnected the temporary hoses and put her back together.

Engine now starts and idles great at the lowest throttle settings -- no more shaking. Only ended up using about 1/2 the mixture, so I took the rest and put it into my Honda 4-stroke lawnmower and a Ryobi 4-stroke trimmer to clean them out as well.
 
I use Sea Foam on the motorbike and it makes a big difference. From what you have posted, going to try it on the ficht next.
 
i use it on all my engines 4stroke or 2.works great for carbon and cleaning carbs.Duff you should try it on your 2stroke smoker
 
where are you guys finding it? ive heard of guys using it for years but never seen it anywhere for sale.
 
I did the shock treatment a couple of years ago and will do it again this fall. The stuff is awesome. I also throw a can in every second fill up or so.

I buy mine from Baker's in Nanaimo but like others have posted you can buy it at Canadian Tire, Lordco, or Napa. Great stuff and don't be scared to use it in new motors. Maybe just put a can in the tank on a fill up if your nervous about the shock treatment. Mines an 2003 with some hours on her and she loves it.

You can use the stuff on all sorts of motors. I think you get a bit of a discount if you buy it by the case.
 
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