Amgil
Registered Member
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2021
- Messages
- 47
- Reaction score
- 54
- Points
- 18
- Genesis Model Year
- 2015
- Genesis Model Type
- 2G Genesis Sedan (2015-2016)
Couldn’t find any threads of people doing this so I figured id document it and warn anyone who’s thinking about doing this.
This is my 2015 5.0 @ 70k miles, car felt a little sluggish and like it was misfiring when cold so i decided to pop the manifold off and check how bad the carbon was, to my surprise it wasn’t as bad as I thought it’d be, but it was still pretty bad.


I always see people talk about how using seafoam or CRC will clean them, well let me save you some money and tell you that nothing you spray into your intake will take this carbon off because that stuff is baked on those valves and plus how the manifold is shaped. The only real way to get your valves clean is taking the manifold off and doing it by hand or walnut blasting them. I decided to take the doing it by hand route and it was a pain in the a$$.
Even after i took the manifold off and sprayed and let the valves soak in a puddle of crc and then brake clean, it was still difficult to scrape the carbon off. I should of bought a media blaster.
It was also a HUGE pain to get the manifold off its not just pop a few bolts off and its off, there is multiple bolts, hoses, and electrical connectors behind the manifold that are extremely difficult to get to because they are hugged right next to the firewall tucked down behind a wire harness housing that cant be removed without basically taking the whole car apart, and the bolts are behind all this facing towards the intake so its at an extremely awkward angle and there is zero room to work with it. Even using magnet sticks i dropped several bolts and nuts and had to fish them out….
I did manage to get the job done but it was a all day job and my hands and arms look like I got into a fight with a cat. I would definitely not do it again, im going to slap a catch can on and call it a day.
This is my 2015 5.0 @ 70k miles, car felt a little sluggish and like it was misfiring when cold so i decided to pop the manifold off and check how bad the carbon was, to my surprise it wasn’t as bad as I thought it’d be, but it was still pretty bad.


I always see people talk about how using seafoam or CRC will clean them, well let me save you some money and tell you that nothing you spray into your intake will take this carbon off because that stuff is baked on those valves and plus how the manifold is shaped. The only real way to get your valves clean is taking the manifold off and doing it by hand or walnut blasting them. I decided to take the doing it by hand route and it was a pain in the a$$.
Even after i took the manifold off and sprayed and let the valves soak in a puddle of crc and then brake clean, it was still difficult to scrape the carbon off. I should of bought a media blaster.
It was also a HUGE pain to get the manifold off its not just pop a few bolts off and its off, there is multiple bolts, hoses, and electrical connectors behind the manifold that are extremely difficult to get to because they are hugged right next to the firewall tucked down behind a wire harness housing that cant be removed without basically taking the whole car apart, and the bolts are behind all this facing towards the intake so its at an extremely awkward angle and there is zero room to work with it. Even using magnet sticks i dropped several bolts and nuts and had to fish them out….
I did manage to get the job done but it was a all day job and my hands and arms look like I got into a fight with a cat. I would definitely not do it again, im going to slap a catch can on and call it a day.