Tomorrow is the big day. Going for my re-Etest on my LX9 swap.
It failed its original test (months ago) for very high NOX, which to the best of my knowledge is the chemical compound created due to elevated cylinder/combustion temps. Bring down the cylinder temp and the NOX will drop. It did pass HC and CO limits.
Since that test, a major motor issue has been corrected (was running on 5 cylinders before, due to a misplaced pushrod). An EGR valve has been installed which should in itself drop NOX levels. It has a newish (6 months old) 3 way catalytic converter (this was present on the original test).
I think the proper running motor, the addition of the egr valve and more tuning should result in a pass. However, I still worry. I want to de-carbon the engine tonight. My logic is that any carbon deposits on the piston tops and cylinder head can increase compression and more compression equates to more heat and NOX.
I want to use plain old water. I live in a condo complex and the Seafoam cloud will likely result in police at my door. I did some Google research and saw some pretty amazing results from just water.
The big question I need answered is how much water do I feed through a vacuum line and at what rate? In other words, a quart? a gallon? Over 5 minutes? 10? 30?
I'm thinking I will either use the small FPR vacuum line or the PCV line as the draw source for the water.
It failed its original test (months ago) for very high NOX, which to the best of my knowledge is the chemical compound created due to elevated cylinder/combustion temps. Bring down the cylinder temp and the NOX will drop. It did pass HC and CO limits.
Since that test, a major motor issue has been corrected (was running on 5 cylinders before, due to a misplaced pushrod). An EGR valve has been installed which should in itself drop NOX levels. It has a newish (6 months old) 3 way catalytic converter (this was present on the original test).
I think the proper running motor, the addition of the egr valve and more tuning should result in a pass. However, I still worry. I want to de-carbon the engine tonight. My logic is that any carbon deposits on the piston tops and cylinder head can increase compression and more compression equates to more heat and NOX.
I want to use plain old water. I live in a condo complex and the Seafoam cloud will likely result in police at my door. I did some Google research and saw some pretty amazing results from just water.
The big question I need answered is how much water do I feed through a vacuum line and at what rate? In other words, a quart? a gallon? Over 5 minutes? 10? 30?
I'm thinking I will either use the small FPR vacuum line or the PCV line as the draw source for the water.
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