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It's part solvent so it'll do some cleaning but if solvents are your thing why not just pour some kerosene in?
AHHHHHHHH Son take your junk to another thread where people care to hear that mess.
I may be the flat out dumbest person on this forum. But I'm not ****ed stupid. Don't reply to me like I am...
This is what I don't get. All the people like you that insessantly believe the lie that the "RX"'s are not solvents. Do you people not realize that is simply not true??? Making fun of, or downing any other cleaner because it is a solvent is simply down right wrong. Seafoam is no more a solvent than Auto-RX is, or any other engine cleaner is. So don't bring that ignorant junk into a thread that is NOT about auto-rx. Where it is NOT invited...
Engine oils, and transmission fluids are both solvents to begin with... As are diesel fuel, and gasoline. If you don't believe that, I have a nice small pot of used oil, Dexron-III, and TT-IV that I drop dull chainsaw blades in to clean them before sharpening.
Am I the only person that knows what "A natural mix of esters" actually means???
Lanolino ester from what the MSDS, and people have said here have said a thousand times over. That's nothing more than a fancy name for freaking
WOOL ALCOHOL.
Lord Wool alcohol is made using the most commonly used "bad" substance pumped through an engine to begin with.
Methyl Alcohol.
So don't spill your flat out incorrect post that a certain family of cleaners do not work by being a solvent, and other cleaners are flat out bad because they are a solvent.
They are all solvents...
If it walks like a duck, swims like a duck, quacks like a duck, and
BY DEFINITION is a ****ed duck... Get your facts straight people. It's a ****ed duck people. One bottle may be a pretty mallard duck, and the other may be a Pekin duck. But both are species in the same Anatidae family.
Like I said. I may be the dumbest person here. But I'm not stupid...
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American Heritage Dictionary - Cite This Source sol·vent (slvnt, sôl-) Pronunciation Key
adj.
Capable of meeting financial obligations.
Chemistry. Capable of dissolving another substance.
n.
Chemistry.
A substance in which another substance is dissolved, forming a solution.
A substance, usually a liquid, capable of dissolving another substance.
Something that solves or explains.
[French, from Latin solvns, solvent- present participle of solvere, to loosen. See solve.]