Originally posted by: amdwolfman
My rule of thumb is use anything with teflon added. What I do is melt parrafin wax in a coffee can add a teflon lubricant and soak my mountain bike chain in it . Works like a charm,no more oily pant-legs. But I always use it ( teflon additive ) in any vehicle i own. JMO
Originally posted by: HappyPuppy
I used MMO for many years when I was a heavy equipment mechanic in the Operating Engineers. It is the best lubricant you can buy for your pneumatic tools. Squirt some in the air intake, point it away from you and squeeze the trigger. Repeat until the oil that gets blown out is clean.
Originally posted by: Pacfanweb
Other than the uses like Tominator described, MMO will do your engine no good, and may in fact harm it. If your engine is in proper working order, it doesn't need any extra "upper cylinder lubrication".
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
Originally posted by: amdwolfman
My rule of thumb is use anything with teflon added. What I do is melt parrafin wax in a coffee can add a teflon lubricant and soak my mountain bike chain in it . Works like a charm,no more oily pant-legs. But I always use it ( teflon additive ) in any vehicle i own. JMO
congratulations, you're screwing yourself.
Yes, I don't think it would be a very good idea to add anything that doesen't naturally burn clean to the gasoline that you put in your car.. It would probably do more harm than good. If anything, we should be removing the nasty compounds found in gasoline (like benzene.. ugh) and replace them with cleaner burning things like Ethanol. Not MTBE..Originally posted by: Soybomb
Its a light oil but I still wonder if burning it couldn't damage the oxygen sensor and cats. I've used it before on engines going into storage, etc, but I for day to day use those would be my concerns.