If you have a 2025 then you are in luck, you have both port injection and direct injection. It should cycle between the two injectors and help keep the valves clean. The recommendation for Top Tier fuel is good advise and will keep those injectors clean and help control some of the blowby and PCV recirculation of junk issues. If you have the previous engine with direct injection only there isn't a lot you can do other than run Top Tier fuel, occasionally run a bottle of fuel system cleaner with PEA through it, and keep your oil changed. Catch cans have only a modest impact, but every little bit could help I suppose. The end result will be the need to get it cleaned which isn't an inexpensive thing.
Now they tell us that direct injection does not burn cleanly and has too much particulate matter in the exhaust. So all those reasons to go to DI for more power and economy are about to be negated with the roll out of "gasoline particulate filters"(GPF) or if you are from Europe Petrol Particulate Filters(PPF). They will work a lot like a diesel particulate filter and will require periodic burning off of the soot and deposits in the GPF thereby erasing any fuel economy advantages. So be glad you own a pre-GPF truck.
Now they tell us that direct injection does not burn cleanly and has too much particulate matter in the exhaust. So all those reasons to go to DI for more power and economy are about to be negated with the roll out of "gasoline particulate filters"(GPF) or if you are from Europe Petrol Particulate Filters(PPF). They will work a lot like a diesel particulate filter and will require periodic burning off of the soot and deposits in the GPF thereby erasing any fuel economy advantages. So be glad you own a pre-GPF truck.
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