Hub · Viral car claims
Viral car-repair claims, reviewed
"$1 liquid eliminates a decade of engine filth." "$3 kills all rust forever." "Banned in 11 states." Every week another clickbait video promises a kitchen-cabinet miracle that will save you from your dealer. We rate each claim against shop-floor reality — what's actually true, what's misleading, and what's outright dangerous to pour into your car.
How we rate claims
Every page on this hub follows a fixed structure: the claim verbatim, our verdict on an 8-tier scale, what's actually happening in the underlying chemistry or mechanics, what we'd actually recommend a customer do, and an FAQ for the questions that always follow.
Read the full rating methodology →Oil & lubricants
Engine oil additives, friction modifiers, the "buried Japanese trick" genre.
- MISLEADING
Is the "$1 Japanese oil trick" that stops engine wear forever real?
The 'Japanese oil trick' is almost certainly MoS2 (molybdenum disulfide), a real industrial friction modifier. It is German, not Japanese (Liqui Moly popularized it), sold openly at every parts store for $15-20, has real but modest measured friction benefits, and was never buried by anyone.
Battery & electrical
Battery rejuvenation, "doubling" battery life, alternator tricks.
- OUTDATED
Does a "$1 mineral" really double car battery life? The Epsom-salt reality.
The mineral is Epsom salt (magnesium sulfate). It was a real desulfation hack for serviceable flooded-cell batteries 40+ years ago. It does not work on modern sealed AGM or EFB batteries, and trying it on yours will void the warranty without helping the battery.
Additives & "miracle" liquids
The $1, $2, $3 "they tried to ban this" pour-in-and-fix-everything claims.
- DANGEROUS
Is the "$2 liquid that destroys engine sludge forever" real? Our shop-floor verdict.
An aggressive solvent flush on a high-mileage engine is a textbook way to spin a bearing. The viral 'kitchen-cabinet flush' is folklore that real shops spend money cleaning up after.
Leaks & seals
Stop-leak chemistry, head gasket sealers, and what actually works.
- MISLEADING
Is the "$2 liquid that stops any leak" really banned in 11 states?
Automotive stop-leak products are not banned in any US state. The products are real (Bar's Leaks, BlueDevil), they work in specific narrow situations, and they can permanently damage your cooling or oiling system if applied to the wrong leak.
Rust & body
Rust converters vs rust removers vs "permanent" rust kills.
- MOSTLY FALSE
Does a "$3 liquid" really kill car rust permanently? The phosphoric-acid reality.
The $3 liquid is almost certainly phosphoric acid (sold as Ospho or Naval Jelly). It converts surface rust to iron phosphate. It does not kill rust 'permanently,' does not restore perforated steel, and was never buried by anyone — it has been on hardware store shelves continuously since the 1940s.