Bad effects from MCCC?
#1
TECH Resident
Thread Starter
Bad effects from MCCC?
Hey everyone
Next weekend I'm gonna take my car in to have the top end engine cleaning service done. Last week I was talking to the mechanic at the shop (very reputable) and he recommended I do the cleaning after running my car so rich for the past couple months and bc it has 114k miles. I asked if he was using MCCC and he said no, but something else but I don't remember ( not Seafoam, he laughed when I brought that up).
My question is I hear of all the great results using MCCC and similar products, but what bad effects could doing this possibly cause? I just want to know, both good and possibly bad, that may happen before I do this.
I already have new spark plugs, wires, and fuel filter that will be put on after the cleaning is done. If there is something else that needs possible changing just let me know.
Thanks and I appreciate your input!
Next weekend I'm gonna take my car in to have the top end engine cleaning service done. Last week I was talking to the mechanic at the shop (very reputable) and he recommended I do the cleaning after running my car so rich for the past couple months and bc it has 114k miles. I asked if he was using MCCC and he said no, but something else but I don't remember ( not Seafoam, he laughed when I brought that up).
My question is I hear of all the great results using MCCC and similar products, but what bad effects could doing this possibly cause? I just want to know, both good and possibly bad, that may happen before I do this.
I already have new spark plugs, wires, and fuel filter that will be put on after the cleaning is done. If there is something else that needs possible changing just let me know.
Thanks and I appreciate your input!
#2
it all depends on how dirty everything is. ive heard of people needing new injectors after. so it really depends on the caR generally if you run the car alot and put good gas in(i dont mean 93 i mean clean gas) everything should be in pretty good shape
#3
TECH Resident
Thread Starter
By clean gas do you mean no ethanol? Since I've personally owned the car, 8 months, I've only put in 91 with no ethanol.
I never thought of the injectors needing to be changed possibly, thanks for the insight
I never thought of the injectors needing to be changed possibly, thanks for the insight
#4
Banned
iTrader: (2)
lol......
Top end cleaning has nothing to do with the fuel injectors. It can't hurt them in any way.
bigbomber5,
A very very small number of people have had 02 sensor issues after a good MCCC cleaning. Some said they got fouled spark plugs. I have no idea how a spark plug can get fouled from a cleaning though. I have used it and dozens of people I know personally and not one person has ever had a single issue.
If you have old 02 sensors or can get some old 02 sensors.....pop them in during the cleaning as the engine just has to sit and idle. Or if your rear 02 sensors happen to be tuned out, swap them with the front ones for the cleaning. Then swap them back. Maybe even unscrew the front ones, let them hang, do the cleaning and then screw them back in. NOT SURE if that would cause any issue, I don't see why it would. But ask in the "PCM" section. If they say its ok to just sit and idle.....do that and you'll be sure nothing will happen to the 02 sensors. If you have new spark plugs to go in later....you're good there.
Fuel filter has nothing to do with a top end cleaning, you can change that any time.
If you don't have MCCC already....you might not find it. I recommend Yamaha Outboard Engine Combusion Chamber Cleaner. Find it any Yamaha Outboard dealer.
.
Top end cleaning has nothing to do with the fuel injectors. It can't hurt them in any way.
bigbomber5,
A very very small number of people have had 02 sensor issues after a good MCCC cleaning. Some said they got fouled spark plugs. I have no idea how a spark plug can get fouled from a cleaning though. I have used it and dozens of people I know personally and not one person has ever had a single issue.
If you have old 02 sensors or can get some old 02 sensors.....pop them in during the cleaning as the engine just has to sit and idle. Or if your rear 02 sensors happen to be tuned out, swap them with the front ones for the cleaning. Then swap them back. Maybe even unscrew the front ones, let them hang, do the cleaning and then screw them back in. NOT SURE if that would cause any issue, I don't see why it would. But ask in the "PCM" section. If they say its ok to just sit and idle.....do that and you'll be sure nothing will happen to the 02 sensors. If you have new spark plugs to go in later....you're good there.
Fuel filter has nothing to do with a top end cleaning, you can change that any time.
If you don't have MCCC already....you might not find it. I recommend Yamaha Outboard Engine Combusion Chamber Cleaner. Find it any Yamaha Outboard dealer.
.
#5
TECH Resident
Thread Starter
Good info. I'm sorry I forgot to mention I also have new O2 sensors to swap out afterwards.
#7
Save the manuals!
iTrader: (5)
I'm sure the Yamaha dealer told you that...
What evidence do you have that the Yamaha cleaner is "better" than anything else and what evidence do you have that its appropriate to put a marine product in a regular car engine?
bigbomber5 - There's a lot of goodness in doing a carbon cleaning, but there are some pitfalls related to doing this on an older engine. Some manufacturers recommend against it because the deposits it cleans may be "gumming" up seals and gaskets. If one cleans this stuff out, some say that it can cause gasket leaks.
On my car, I've rolled the dice with great results.
Here is a good thread with some quantifiable info on this stuff. Essentially, its all (Seafoam, MCC, etc.) very similar: https://ls1tech.com/forums/general-m...eafoam-vs.html
In the end, the method which you use to apply the cleaner will probably do more for you than the actual product you choose.
What evidence do you have that the Yamaha cleaner is "better" than anything else and what evidence do you have that its appropriate to put a marine product in a regular car engine?
bigbomber5 - There's a lot of goodness in doing a carbon cleaning, but there are some pitfalls related to doing this on an older engine. Some manufacturers recommend against it because the deposits it cleans may be "gumming" up seals and gaskets. If one cleans this stuff out, some say that it can cause gasket leaks.
On my car, I've rolled the dice with great results.
Here is a good thread with some quantifiable info on this stuff. Essentially, its all (Seafoam, MCC, etc.) very similar: https://ls1tech.com/forums/general-m...eafoam-vs.html
In the end, the method which you use to apply the cleaner will probably do more for you than the actual product you choose.
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#8
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I have yet to use MCCC, I usually find SeaFoam on sale at Advance when I just happen to want to use it . I've had nothing but great results from using it... ran it through my '99 T/A, '94Z, the '98 T/A I currently own and my '02 JGC Overland. Can't tell you if it's a placebo effect or not, but it seems like the motor runs better after a good treatment. My '98 has nearly 250K miles on it and smoked like a diesel about to blow when I treated it 2 years ago. I'd just purchased the car and was going to change the plugs/wires anyway so I figured I may as well run some SeaFoam through it.
The stuff has bound to work decent... as I mentioned above, the car smoked like crazy the first few brief WOT runs after letting it set. The car actually disappeared in a cloud of dark gray smoke with the first hard blip of the throttle lol. Guess that means a lot of carbon was dislodged some how or another, the car still runs just a smooth 2 years later.
The stuff has bound to work decent... as I mentioned above, the car smoked like crazy the first few brief WOT runs after letting it set. The car actually disappeared in a cloud of dark gray smoke with the first hard blip of the throttle lol. Guess that means a lot of carbon was dislodged some how or another, the car still runs just a smooth 2 years later.
#9
My $0.02 (WARNING: Anecdotal evidence only)
My step-father (a GM, ASE certified Master Mechanic) told me GM’s Top Engine Cleaner and Chrysler’s MCCC both work quite well, much better than Sea-Foam; and if you let the stuff penetrate overnight (vs. 5 to 15 minutes like the can states) the results improve even more.
So, my wife’s car had a hot / hard-starting issue which had not been resolved using Sea-Foam (which soaked overnight), but it was resolved using MCCC.
One could possibly argue that the S/F treatment provided the primary cleaning, and then the MCCC (a week later) finished the job, so take my story for what it’s worth, anecdotal evidence only.
So, my wife’s car had a hot / hard-starting issue which had not been resolved using Sea-Foam (which soaked overnight), but it was resolved using MCCC.
One could possibly argue that the S/F treatment provided the primary cleaning, and then the MCCC (a week later) finished the job, so take my story for what it’s worth, anecdotal evidence only.
#10
Save the manuals!
iTrader: (5)
My step-father (a GM, ASE certified Master Mechanic) told me GM’s Top Engine Cleaner and Chrysler’s MCCC both work quite well, much better than Sea-Foam; and if you let the stuff penetrate overnight (vs. 5 to 15 minutes like the can states) the results improve even more.
So, my wife’s car had a hot / hard-starting issue which had not been resolved using Sea-Foam (which soaked overnight), but it was resolved using MCCC.
One could possibly argue that the S/F treatment provided the primary cleaning, and then the MCCC (a week later) finished the job, so take my story for what it’s worth, anecdotal evidence only.
So, my wife’s car had a hot / hard-starting issue which had not been resolved using Sea-Foam (which soaked overnight), but it was resolved using MCCC.
One could possibly argue that the S/F treatment provided the primary cleaning, and then the MCCC (a week later) finished the job, so take my story for what it’s worth, anecdotal evidence only.
#11
Banned
iTrader: (2)
Its exactly like MCCC and just as good.
Next time ask how I know........don't guess. Just beleiveing what some jackass at a parts store says about THEIR product......is stupid. Don't do that.
.
#12
Banned
iTrader: (2)
I have yet to use MCCC, I usually find SeaFoam on sale at Advance when I just happen to want to use it . I've had nothing but great results from using it... ran it through my '99 T/A, '94Z, the '98 T/A I currently own and my '02 JGC Overland. Can't tell you if it's a placebo effect or not, but it seems like the motor runs better after a good treatment. My '98 has nearly 250K miles on it and smoked like a diesel about to blow when I treated it 2 years ago. I'd just purchased the car and was going to change the plugs/wires anyway so I figured I may as well run some SeaFoam through it.
The stuff has bound to work decent... as I mentioned above, the car smoked like crazy the first few brief WOT runs after letting it set. The car actually disappeared in a cloud of dark gray smoke with the first hard blip of the throttle lol. Guess that means a lot of carbon was dislodged some how or another, the car still runs just a smooth 2 years later.
The stuff has bound to work decent... as I mentioned above, the car smoked like crazy the first few brief WOT runs after letting it set. The car actually disappeared in a cloud of dark gray smoke with the first hard blip of the throttle lol. Guess that means a lot of carbon was dislodged some how or another, the car still runs just a smooth 2 years later.
2) The smoke people get from using SeaFoam to clean the top end if from all the SeaFoam that pools inside the intake.
3) Placebo....is that the engine runs so much better....it doesn't.
.
#13
Save the manuals!
iTrader: (5)
Do you have an MSDS for the Yamaha cleaner? (I looked and it seems that they are only provided by dealers and aren't available online.) The MSDS will give the actual chemistry for the product and can allow parallels to be drawn to MCCC, TEC, and Seafoam.
#14
TECH Resident
Thread Starter
Thanks for all the input guys!
I didnt think of this before, but should I change my oil after doing this? I would hate to have to change out a 600 mile batch of Mobile1...
I didnt think of this before, but should I change my oil after doing this? I would hate to have to change out a 600 mile batch of Mobile1...
#15
I use Seafoam all the time and do a half hour soak to clean o2 sensors with it. It is also a great thing to soak connector ends in to clean up corrosion, a quick dab of diaelectric grease on the connector will keep furhter corrosion away too.
p.s. After doing piston soaks (for sticking rings) with Seafoam and MCCC, I would say MCCC seems way stronger.
hth
Steve