Seafoam is teh *****!

Around the intake area there should be main 1/4" black rubber vacuum lines. Pull one off before you start the engine. Have a buddy rev it up while you use clear airline tubing to suck seafoam out of a cup. Have a pre-measured amount of seafoam in the cup. I recommend 1/2 can. As soon as it is all sucked in, cut off the engine. Wait ten minutes. Take car for a spririted drive. Enjoy the looks on peoples faces. All those haters will be like; "hell yeah, that douche's mustang is finally on the way out, woot!". And they will be so wrong. It will just be stronger afterwards like a phoenix rising from the smoke :nice:
 
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Well, my seafoam experience was a bad one.

I decided my 145,000 mile 96 Cobra could benefit from a bottle or two. The whole process was easy, and I definately got the smoke show. After I let it idle for a bit, I shut it off, and went inside. About 20 minutes later, I went back outside, to find the car was GONE!!!!!!

I live on a 7 acre lot, and I turned to look, only to find that the car had rolled down the driveway, across my entire back yard (no fences) and down into a creek. Luckily, the only thing that saved the car from being submerged, was a small tree. It cracked the bumper, and busted out a taillight, but saved the car from drowning. So, I counted my blessings.
 
99BRINGIT said:
Well, my seafoam experience was a bad one.

I decided my 145,000 mile 96 Cobra could benefit from a bottle or two. The whole process was easy, and I definately got the smoke show. After I let it idle for a bit, I shut it off, and went inside. About 20 minutes later, I went back outside, to find the car was GONE!!!!!!

I live on a 7 acre lot, and I turned to look, only to find that the car had rolled down the driveway, across my entire back yard (no fences) and down into a creek. Luckily, the only thing that saved the car from being submerged, was a small tree. It cracked the bumper, and busted out a taillight, but saved the car from drowning. So, I counted my blessings.
Damn man, I didn't know that happened to you!
 
Seafoam to detect leaks??

Ok so this is my question. Can seafoam be used to detect leaks in the system? I used it a while ago and had a small bit of smoke coming out from somewhere on the left side of my engine. I was in the driver's seat so I couldn't exactly determine where it was coming from. Is this normal or should I start looking for some kind of leak, possibly before the cats?

I did have about 4x more smoke coming out of 1 pipe than the other, which leads me to believe that I need to get an H-Pipe to balance out the exhaust system. Has anyone else experienced similar? :shrug:

I have video if it will be of help.