Hi,
IMHO it’s is not necessary as the oil & fuel experts have the responsibility to make their products sell and answer to an institution of engine designers and chemists.
When it comes to salesmen, in aftermarket goods, they will say and do anything for a buck!
If you study the Techron product, they list it’s ingredients as a Stoddard solvent.
This is a wide open statement to be non descriptive in nature.
It can be anything from kerosene to dry cleaning solvent with a relative to naphtha, but not necessarily so, or it would have to be listed as such!
So with that said, you have no idea what you are buying packaged to an unknown buying public!
Now you need to consider the quantity that is in the bottle of ounces going into a tank of fuel being treated! We are talking dilution into many gallons possible and then expect wonders!
The wonder, comes later. In that did it really do anything, but make you feel better that you did “something,” good for your car?
I have done it and I figure, I got smoke blown up and out my tailpipe!
If you have spare change, give it to a homeless person, the result will be the same for you, as you won’t know where it went!
Just a well earned humble opinion of my own!
Phil
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