Should You Flush Your Engine?

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The question, “should you flush your engine” recently came up after I inspected the salvage yard engine I just bought. Under the valve cover there was some sludge build up that I was concerned about. In this video I talk about my views on flushing engines and what to do if you have an engine similar to this one.

I hope you find the information helpful.

Thanks for watching!

#ETCG1Video #EngineFlush

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ETCG1
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i do an engine flush once a year as a preventative maintenance. that being said i have a 79 volvo with almost 560k that ive owned for 30 years

scottjohnson
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You have just set my mind, i was just thinking of flushing before oil change, what you said completely clicked in, because my heart was all gunked up, the surgeon fitted a stent to clear the blockage, but in the process the gunk travelled through my pipes and caused a blockage in the main artery in my leg, all sorted !
now i flush my system regularly with Rum ;)

gaztinsley
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You said something that resonated with me. Back in ‘79/80 the very first shop I worked for, I mentioned that I wanted to flush my engine to clean it out. My boss looked at me and said that I might clean out anything that is keeping my engine from leaking in the first place. I eventually just pulled the pan, cleaned it and replaced the oil pump. All my oil changes afterwards were clean. Your advice kept me from making that mistake this weekend with a VVT engine. Thanks!

myhotrodtech
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Personal experience from a 2005 Colorado I had. It had oil burning issues from lots of awful buy here pay here ownership and PCV issues they were already known for. I changed the oil religiously at 2-3k intervals and this slowly fixed the oil burning issues over about 15k and I never had to purchase the expensive valve cover with integrated PCV and the i5 ran like a top.

tytotheler
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Thank you this video is really helping to me to understand that engine flushing is not required and can harm your car rather then helping the engine.

Shutter_heart
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I've change my oil every 3 months or 3, 000 miles for the last 20 years on my Xterra.
The last couple of years I've been adding the recommended amount of MMO with the oil and filter changes.
Haven't had any issue, but then again the internals were extremely clean even after 20 years

nightflyr
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I had horrible sludge on my Nissan frontier v6. It was unbelievable when I removed the valve covers. I just left the valve covers off and pressure washed the rockers as good as I could and spray the 0° nozzle down the holes etc. Drained the oil and refilled it and it's been good for 5 years now. People think I'm crazy but I recommend everyone to do it. As long as you drain the oil it's fine

jeremycurtisisgay
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I completely believe what you said about finding sludge that was a mold of gunk under the valve covers because it happened to me. Back in the early 70s, I bought a used Mercury Cougar with, if I remember correctly, a 251 c.i. engine. I had no idea who owed it previously or how it was taken care of. I went to change the oil and it wouldn't accept anywhere near the oil expected oil capacity. So I took off the valve covers and what I found was amazing. There were perfect sludge molds with "Ford" imbossed in the surface from the raised letters on valve covers. They looked just like black Jello molds. Then I took removed the pan and it was half filled with sludge. I'm amazed I even had oil pressure. Of course, I cleaned everything up and I think I ran an engine flush but I got rid of that car as fast as possible. It's amazing how some people don't seem to know that you have to maintain cars.

bmfilmnut
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I have flushed engines in the past but they already had some issues. You made some very good points. I have a 1995 Tahoe with a 5.7 ltr. It was using almost 3 qts. of oil between oils changes. Had 198k miles. It also needed an oil pan gasket so I decided to do kerosene and ATF flush prior to removing the oil pan. It was nasty in the pan and oil pickup screen. The engine now has 252k miles and only uses 1/2 qt between oil changes. I guess my luck is a little better than yours. Good video.

ricklarson
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My hats off to you Eric for sticking with your commitment. Good man

WisconsinWanderer
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Eric, whilst I don't disagree with you about super sludged up engines, I've had good experiences reducing oil consumption by doing a flush. It's important to do it methodically, I always run the flush with FRESH oil. That means, 1. Do an oil change, drive the car a bit. 2. Do the flush oil change. 3. Do another final oil change after 500 miles. Doing this on a few Toyotas has reduced oil consumption and improved compression (tested) which has stayed healthy by follow up with 5k oil changed. Most people don't do all of this before and after flushing so maybe don't get all the benefits. Sure it carries some risk, but if you do it this way it's pretty low. I've tried LiquiMoly and SeaFoam.

supervitz
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I'm so sorry this happened to you and her. You worked so hard on that and did so many test drives and nothing happened and then this. :(

blockbertus
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I like to use marvel mystery oil about 30 miles before the oil change. It lightly cleans from my experience. Great in the gas too. You have to look at the condition of the engine too. Borescope down the dip stick tube. In the valve covers and anywhere it will fit to see if there's large deposits of goo. I think a flush with an external high capacity filter might be ok.

methanial
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It's exactly as you said - you need to be very mindful of a lot of factors if you're thinking about doing an engine oil flush. Older engines that don't have any fancy controls that can get clogged or damaged are fine. But something like this, you definitely need to think twice. In cases like this, it might be better to just change the oil VERY frequently and religiously. Fresh clean oil can sometimes help to wash away sludge and buildup, rather than attacking it directly and immediately with an engine flush treatment.

CrazyIvan
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Sound advice Eric. Was thinking about doing an engine flush on my 99 Camaro SS 6sp with 85k original miles but I'm glad I caught your video. Also, I couldn't help but notice how clean your shop is. This tells me a lot about you and the way you go about your business. Good luck and I look forward to viewing more of your auto videos in the near future.

racerx
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Best engine flush is cheap oil, good filter change it every 500-1000 miles. Done it with several cars, had great luck with it. You can also add 1/2 at of atf in the oil.

ionstorm
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I've done two engine flushes, had no issues. I was also prepped to change the rear main seal as well as the front seal.

thatguyontheright
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I feel for you, man...I also was the recipient of bad news after a repair and had to own the problem. As far as motor flushing goes, I have never had a bad result by doing this. It's never a one-off procedure though. My daughter was given a 1999 Accord from her aunt who was moving from Brooklyn, NY to Sacramento, CA. The car only had 72K miles on it, but these were primarily NYC street miles, very little highway miles. Also it looked as though the oil was never changed periodically. Needless to say the stuff sorta oozed out.

One day the car started bucking on her and threw a CEL. It turned out the VTEC screen was clogged with gunk. I DID the engine flush, changed the oil, ran it for 1000 miles, ran another flush, changed the oil again and replaced the VTEC screen and gasket. She's put more than 40K miles on it since then, but I religiously changed the oil every 5000 miles with hi-mileage oil AFTER a five minute motor flush. I check and clean the VTEC screen each time.

The last few times the VTEC screen was pretty clear. So I think I'm done flushing, but will stick with the high-mileage oil changes. Yeah, it's a pain, but I think I brought this engine a longer life than it would have had if it stayed in Brooklyn.

richardwhalen
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Thanks for the tip Eric 👍 I recently watched an interview with the makers of Red Line and the guy recommended the same thing. Instead he performed multiple oil changes with conventional oil (non-Redline) to let the detergents do some 'gentle' cleaning until the drained oil cleaned up somewhat.

kristianhermann
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Didn't think about this, but this may explain how I blew up my 340 Wildcat all those years ago. Had the car for a couple of years before I took off the valve covers. Lots of gunk, so I flushed it with transmission fluid. A month later I noticed a tickticktick and before I could investigate, an end cap came apart and sent a connecting rod through the side of the block. There were words said and tears shed. Never thought to look at the oil pump pickup.

maingun