From another old timer. In the 60,s in Australia a lot of the cars being
raced had water injection
where water was bled into inlet manifold. You could even buy kits to fit to
your daily driver. Suction
from inlet manifold just socked a tiny amount of water from a tank in engine
bay. Cars apparently (allegedly)
ran smoother, cooler, better mpg.
John
<Old_Timer> wrote in message
news:0eukp3l2ik4ip3fr5kvru85cnmrou75gtf@4ax.com...
>
> My V6 Sonata is used primarily for city driving. I have been told
> that this driving pattern can somtimes result in a deposit build-up
> internally on the engine.
>
> Recently my car overheated because of the failure of the water pump.
> The water pump was replaced and now the car runs as good as ever and
> the bonus is that my MPG creeped up just a bit. Can this be the
> result of deposit build-ups burning off when it overheated?
>
> I check my MPG closely by setting the trip meter to zero when I fill
> up and then on the next fill-up I divide the miles driven by the
> gallons needed to refill. I do this check frequently.
>
> Remembering when with carbureted cars I sometimes sprayed a bit of
> water into the intake to clean out deposits.
>
> Old_Timer
>
> >> Stay informed about: Side effect of overheating