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No detonation or other problems, why bother?
I shouldn’t take more than a couple of hours to pull each head and do the credit card thing on each piston crown. I would think that mechanical cleaning works better. Plus you get the satisfaction of seeing your pistons.
how do you put raw rice in a running engine? or walnut hulls for that matter?
Spray a fine mist of water into the intake while reving the engine, steam cleaning.
I do remember 50+ years ago reading WWII Pacific air stories that told of hellcats and corsairs being equipped with emergency water injection for a good boost in power. Only to be used in emergency due to decreased engine life.
I don't recall the details, but it was something like that would crank up the superchargers to boost power, and the water was to reduce detonation from the higher pressure.
The water isn't providing power it is reducing detonation thus allowing larger throttle openings and more boost from the supercharger. It's actually water methanol which is mostly water. It might take an engine that was limited to 52 or 53 in. of manifold pressure at takeoff and allow it to go to 60+ assuming the supercharger was capable of more.
Why does everybody keep saying WWII ? I was still working almost exclusively on aircraft with 18 cyl. 2800 cu. in. radials until 2018. Never personally worked on any with water injection. In engines that used it the horsepower maximum would be listed as dry vs wet horsepower. I would roughly say the difference was 5 to 700 more horsepower in the big radials. The Max RPM remained at usually 2700-2800 but the power increase meant the variable pitch propeller would be driven to a courser pitch by the governor basically taking larger bites of air. Not intending to de-rail the OP but it seems he has come to a conclusion anyways.
Water injection also used in 60s on turbo charged GM aluminum V8 in Olds, Pontiac, Buick!I have watched as an elderly gentleman I knew poured crushed walnut shells into a running Ford V8, 312ci I think. It can be done. In the 80s the stopped engine process was a factory recommended procedure for GM cars with deposits on the valves. Some GM techs I knew claimed it worked just as well to put it through the vertical throttle body injectors but couldn't figure out a process for horizontal throttle bodies hence the engine partial tear down. I've apparently met a lot of morons, I guess I'm one as well. There are all sorts of things that will do allsorts of things we may never know if not tried. Risk, reward. Your personal experiences may differ greatly from those of others!Brian