3mpg gain!?!?

TopherSho said:
The problem will be unless you are injecting the techron or any cleaning agent into the intake upstream the backs of the valves will never get clean :(.  we run in cylinder injection and the gas cleaners only hit the cylinder walls and maybe the piston on the up-compression late spray stratified charge.

The unfortunate problem. In another video, that same tech mentioned the use of catch cans (although he said they would void the warranty), use of the Techron (as you mentioned it also doesn't do much about the valves/runners, just the little bit of valve overlap that may occur), and using a high quality full synthetic oil, that will resist building up in the runners once it gets dumped back in through the PCV valve.

Sounds like really the only "safe" solutions are new heads or a thorough media cleaning of the runners. I wish that I could've got out in front of this issue, but it is, what it is.
 
TopherSho said:
One thing to consider is that out of boost these engines are TERRIBLE for the weight and gearing of vehicle we drive.  In traffic with moderation of speed (decrease and then increase) or even near idle we consume a lot more fuel in these gen-1 blocks than gen-2 and the 2.7.

The dual fueling is REALLY going to help with this issue. There were talks of a retrofit kit, but considering the new 3.5 shares it's architecture with the 2.7, and not the outgoing 3.5, I have a hard time believing something like that would bolt up.
 
Sorry bub.  It is solvable though.  and even more interestingly Ford may actually be developing a solution that *MIGHT* be backward compatible in the form of a throttle-body in injector.  it will be spendy in oem form though.
 
A new kit like that would be the nuts, and I think would solve a lot of issues. Hopefully it comes sooner rather than later.
 
Primalzer said:
I'll have to drop a scope down into my intake one of these days and see if my issues are serious enough to warrant the cleaning. Not sure I'll ever go the intake chemical route. I'll keep doing my Techron with every oil change, and spend a day a week or so, and beat the piss out of it, to get the loose stuff out.

Dropped a scope in last night, and saw the effects of a GTDI, with 100K miles, no meth, and presumably no cleaning.

The valve stems are caked, the runners are covered in oily carbon building, there is significant buildup on at least 1 of the intake valves. I took pictures, but they didn't turn out well. Tough to discern much. But watching while I was doing the scope told the story.

Now the question is, do I try and go after Ford for new heads? Is it worth it? Do I go to a BMW or VW dealer to see if they'd do a walnut shell service on mine? Ford has no cleaning or removal method for the carbon buildup, so I'm hesitant to take it to Ford.

The car runs fine when warm, idles steady usually, but surges when it's cold.
 
I had mine cleaned,  took the risk since i have the super warranty and if the cats blew they'd replace them. 

I do not have a scope so i have no idea the effectiveness.
 
TopherSho said:
I had mine cleaned,  took the risk since i have the super warranty and if the cats blew they'd replace them. 

I do not have a scope so i have no idea the effectiveness.

Chemical or walnut shell?
 
You guys are getting incredible MPG numbers. I see a max of 23 mpg on pure highway driving with my 2014 SHO. That's with ~70 mph cruising.
 
Running 1850 miles round trip from Vail, Colorado to Kansas City and back I got 28 mpg on first tank and 24 on the way back. Over the whole average it was 23 for all the tanks combined. I was pleasantly surprised. I did finally find some 93 octane in KC and ran 2 tank fulls through it. Seemed like it was a bit worse but mostly because of the short trips and enjoying the throttle response sea level. Amazing the difference some oxygen makes. Sorry a bit off topic.
 
Back
Top