Here I am

Platinum DEF

Attention: TDR Forum Junkies
To the point: Click this link and check out the Front Page News story(ies) where we are tracking the introduction of the 2025 Ram HD trucks.

Thanks, TDR Staff

It finally happened...

Maintenance Schedule

Status
Not open for further replies.
Anyone know the skinny on the new Platinum DEF put out by Blue? Maybe it’s Ultra filtered? I don’t know what they could do to Urea and water. It’s being advertised through NAPA but not much info on it.
 
That’s what I thought but wanted to hear what other folks know about it. Maybe just a way to make more money by adding the word Platinum. They advertise it as being easier on the SCR.
 
The sales sheet says it has a proprietary additive package, but the SDS only shows two ingredients.

Screenshot_20200912-185434_Drive.jpg
 
Thanks for the link. I checked it out and maybe the synthetic Urea doesn’t leave as much residue as the organic type.

The special additive is the word “Platinum”
 
To add to the above, could be fancy marketting.

The spec sheets for the normal BLUE says 32.5 urea and 67.5 deionized water.

BlueDEF® is a mixture of 32.5% high purity synthetic urea and 67.5% deionized water that is used in Selective Catalytic Reduction(SCR) systems on diesel engines.

The BlueDEF platnium is listed as having some magic stuff in it, so would one think it has less water or urea to account for the magic?

BlueDEF PLATINUM™ with advanced SYSTEM SHIELD™ technology is a mixture of high purity synthetic urea, deionized water, and our proprietary additive package manufactured under ISO 22241 guidelines to ensure product quality. With continual use, BlueDEF PLATINUM™ with advanced SYSTEM SHIELD™ technology reduces the formation of deposits that build up in your diesel exhaust system. API registered and meets or exceeds OEM specifications.

They both list the same properties, does not get too technical..

Normal
Screenshot_20200912-215524_Adobe Acrobat.jpg


Platnium

Screenshot_20200912-214106_Adobe Acrobat.jpg
 
I Googled it. Seems to me like regular DEF and Platinum are made the same way with the same urea. The only thing synthetic is the ammonia.

"Manufactured urea is made by combining synthetic ammonia etc."
"Synthetic urea is created from synthetic ammonia etc."
 
In theory Platinum could have a compound(s) added that helps desolve crystallized DEF in the injector and on the leading surface of the DOC, as long as they stayed in the tolerance of UREA required by the standard. If they had something like that, they would be advertising the hell out of "patent #" or "patent pending" as it gives them credibility. With no patent advertising, I have to agree that it is nothing more than a marketing gimmick.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top