Found this over at JU today and was wondering what everyone thinks or if they have ever used this method?
It is SO easy to thoroughly clean the carbon from your engine that it's not even funny, save your money. The usual way to do this is to slowly and carefully dribble 12-16 ounces of water, yes I kid you not, into the air intake as the engine idles. Feed it CAREFULLY and slowly enough that it will take a minute or two to drain the water container. This is not a dangerous method, it's well-proven and most mechanics do it this way. Mopar's CCC (combustion chamber cleaner) is ok too but is expensive and doesn't really do any better job at this than plain water does. This will leave the inside of the combustion chamber sparkling clean. Sometimes ATF will be used instead of water but ATF doesn't work any better and it just causes great white clouds of smoke, something your neighbors wouldn't appreciate.
Just be careful to keep the water container under complete control so you don't accidentally dump in too much at once that could conceivably cause hydrolock. Trickle the water in and you'll be fine, it's a very good technique.
And I really doubt your engine even needs to have the carbon cleaned out unless you drive your Jeep like a 96-year old lady... since driving ultra-conservatively and never revving the engine very high will encourage carbon deposits. Unless your engine is exhibiting signs of carbon build-up by pinging excessively, I'm certain your dealer is just out to make extra $$$ off of you.
It is SO easy to thoroughly clean the carbon from your engine that it's not even funny, save your money. The usual way to do this is to slowly and carefully dribble 12-16 ounces of water, yes I kid you not, into the air intake as the engine idles. Feed it CAREFULLY and slowly enough that it will take a minute or two to drain the water container. This is not a dangerous method, it's well-proven and most mechanics do it this way. Mopar's CCC (combustion chamber cleaner) is ok too but is expensive and doesn't really do any better job at this than plain water does. This will leave the inside of the combustion chamber sparkling clean. Sometimes ATF will be used instead of water but ATF doesn't work any better and it just causes great white clouds of smoke, something your neighbors wouldn't appreciate.
Just be careful to keep the water container under complete control so you don't accidentally dump in too much at once that could conceivably cause hydrolock. Trickle the water in and you'll be fine, it's a very good technique.
And I really doubt your engine even needs to have the carbon cleaned out unless you drive your Jeep like a 96-year old lady... since driving ultra-conservatively and never revving the engine very high will encourage carbon deposits. Unless your engine is exhibiting signs of carbon build-up by pinging excessively, I'm certain your dealer is just out to make extra $$$ off of you.