No problems, just was wondering if it is good to use to avoid any problems down the line.Hi Mike. If you go to Youtube and search on "seafoam in diesel" there are are ton of "YES" and a ton of "NO" as to whether Seafoam actaully works. Personally I don't know, but are you trying to solve some sort of problem with your engine?
You mean the manufacturer engineers that produced the B3350? Those?Clean, Fresh Diesel is best for each-and-every diesel engine.
I do not know why owners leap at any snake oil that claims to be “good” or “better” than what your engine mfr recommends.
Yep, a few years back I bought two cans of Justice Brothers transmission additive for a 3/4 ton PU. The man who owned the transmission shop said put two cans in and run the truck for a while. If it doesn't stop the leak bring it back. I sold the truck about 10 years later with no transmission repairs, leaks or problems.$16 for a bottle that unstuck two injectors that the dealer trained technicians told me needed to be replaced at $2000 is enough for me to believe in snake oil, LOL
Interesting... but he didn't back it up with a lubricity test. Pure methanol will prevent gelling while diluting critical lubricants.Another test, another opinion........
Seasonal-specific diesel contains anti-gel additives already and that is not what is meant by “snake oil” and you knew that. Your post is deliberately inflammatory.To all the nonbelievers in "snake oil"?
Next winter when you go out to blow snow at -20 Fahrenheit, without having first used some anti-gel in your fuel, let us know how you wished that you had installed some "snake oil" in your fuel.