I just did the seafoam cleaning on my 2017 6.2L. It's super easy with a long straw that you snake in by the throttle body. Start the truck and have someone keep the rpm at 2k while you hold down the spare nozzle until the can is empty. Let truck heat soak for 10 minutes with engine off. Then, fire it up and "drive spiritedly " for 10 minutes to clean out the gunk.
It had been many thousands of miles since I did it last and I'm sure some shit got cleaned off. I hammered down and had blue smoke, some engine vibration (misfire like a piece of coke on a valve or two?) for a short bit and then she was off and running. Seemed peppier after the run, but I probably need to do another in quick succession.
So, the moral of the story is if you have a new direct injected motor, it's best to stay on top of the carbon buildup from day one. Knowing more about this now from experience, I wouldn't hesitate to do a seafoam treatment every 15k for $12. It'll probably pay dividends in the long run.
It had been many thousands of miles since I did it last and I'm sure some shit got cleaned off. I hammered down and had blue smoke, some engine vibration (misfire like a piece of coke on a valve or two?) for a short bit and then she was off and running. Seemed peppier after the run, but I probably need to do another in quick succession.
So, the moral of the story is if you have a new direct injected motor, it's best to stay on top of the carbon buildup from day one. Knowing more about this now from experience, I wouldn't hesitate to do a seafoam treatment every 15k for $12. It'll probably pay dividends in the long run.