⚡ Quick Answer
The best engine treatment for diesel trucks is one that matches your goal. For ongoing oil conditioning every service interval, Archoil AR9100 and BG Products MOA are the strongest conventional options. For permanent protection that bonds to your engine's metal and never needs reapplication, Cerma STM-3 Diesel Engine Treatment uses Nano Silicon Carbide (SiC) technology — applied once, sized by displacement: from $105.60 for small diesels to $538.45 for semi trucks.
📋 Table of Contents
- Why Diesel Engines Need Specialized Treatment
- The Top Diesel Engine Treatment Brands (2026)
- Side-by-Side Comparison
- What Most Treatments Have in Common
- A Different Category: Permanent Ceramic Treatment
- Cerma Diesel Sizing Guide: Which Bottle for Your Truck?
- 5-Year Cost Perspective
- Complete Your Diesel Truck Protection
- Which Approach Is Right for Your Truck?
- Frequently Asked Questions
Why Diesel Engines Need Specialized Treatment
Diesel engines are built to work harder than gasoline engines — higher compression ratios (17:1 to 23:1 versus a gas engine's 8:1 to 12:1), higher cylinder pressures, heavier loads, and more heat generated per combustion cycle. That mechanical stress takes a toll on metal surfaces, particularly in the upper cylinder walls, injector bores, turbocharger bearings, and valve train components.
Diesel truck owners understand this better than anyone. Whether you're running a Cummins, Duramax, or Powerstroke in a pickup, managing a fleet of medium-duty trucks, or pushing a semi across the country, engine longevity is not just a preference — it's a financial necessity. A diesel engine rebuild can cost $8,000–$25,000+. Anything that legitimately extends engine life pays for itself many times over.
The challenge is that not all engine treatments are created equal — and many are simply not designed for the demands of a diesel. This guide breaks down what's actually worth using in 2026.
The Top Diesel Engine Treatment Brands (2026)
Here is an honest overview of the most commonly used diesel engine treatments and what they actually do. Each has its strengths — and its limitations.
Archoil AR9100
A friction modifier based on Ionic Liquid technology, widely used in the Ford Powerstroke diesel community. Well-regarded for reducing cold-start noise, hard-shifting, and injector stiction — especially in the 6.0L and 6.4L Powerstroke. Requires reapplication with every oil change.
BG Products MOA (MOA 110)
A professional-grade oil fortifier available primarily through dealers and service shops. Contains detergents and anti-wear additives that help maintain oil film strength. A solid conventional additive, though dealer markup can make it expensive per application. Requires reapplication at every oil change.
Lucas Oil Stabilizer
One of the best-selling oil additives in the US. A heavy petroleum-based viscosity improver and film builder. Widely available at auto parts stores. Works best in older engines where oil consumption is a concern. Has compatibility cautions with some diesel fuel injection systems when used in excess.
Liqui Moly Diesel Purge
A cleaning-focused product rather than a friction modifier — designed to remove injector deposits and combustion chamber buildup. Best used as a periodic cleaning treatment rather than continuous protection. A separate product (Cera Tec) handles friction reduction. Each role requires its own product and reapplication.
Sea Foam Motor Treatment
Primarily a petroleum-based cleaner and carbon deposit remover. Effective at loosening sludge and varnish in older or neglected engines. Not a long-term friction reduction product — its primary value is one-time cleaning rather than ongoing protection. Popular, inexpensive, and widely available.
Cerma STM-3 Diesel
A ceramic-based engine treatment using Nano Silicon Carbide (SiC) — Mohs hardness 9.5, melting point 2,730°C. Bonds permanently to engine metal surfaces and does not drain with oil changes. Sized by displacement for diesel engines: 2oz through 12oz. One-time application. Made in the USA.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Product | Technology | Duration | Diesel Specific? | Price/Application | Friction Reduction |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Archoil AR9100 | Ionic Liquid (IL) | Drains with oil | ◐ Universal | ~$25–35 | Moderate |
| BG Products MOA | Oil fortifier / detergent | Drains with oil | ◐ Universal | ~$20–35 | Moderate |
| Lucas Oil Stabilizer | Petroleum viscosity improver | Drains with oil | ◐ Universal | ~$10–15 | Basic |
| Liqui Moly Diesel Purge | Petroleum cleaner | Drains with oil | ✓ Diesel-focused | ~$18–24 | Cleaning only |
| Sea Foam | Petroleum cleaner | Drains with oil | ◐ Universal | ~$10–12 | Cleaning only |
| Cerma STM-3 Diesel | Nano Silicon Carbide ceramic | Permanent ✓ | ✓ Sized by displacement | $105.60–$538.45 (one-time) | Up to 90%* |
What Most Diesel Treatments Have in Common
Archoil, Lucas, Liqui Moly, BG Products, and Sea Foam are all fundamentally oil-phase products. They work inside the oil itself — modifying how the oil flows, how thick it is, or what compounds it carries. And when the oil drains out, so does the protection.
That means if you run 10,000-mile diesel oil change intervals (which many modern diesel trucks call for), you're getting protection for that interval only. At the next change, you start over. Every oil change interval requires a new bottle, a new cost, and a fresh start on the bonding process.
The math adds up fast. At $25/application for Archoil, with oil changes every 10,000 miles and a target of 200,000 miles on your diesel, that's 20 applications totaling roughly $500 — and your engine is unprotected during every oil change, cold start, and dry-start event before the additive has fully dispersed.
This isn't a flaw unique to one brand — it's simply how oil-phase additives work. The protection they provide is real, but it is temporary by nature. For many diesel owners, that's an acceptable tradeoff. For others, it's a structural problem.
Cerma STM-3 — Diesel Engine Treatment
Applied Once. Protects Permanently.
1–2.8L (2oz) $105.60
3–4.8L (4oz) $195.80
5–6.7L (6oz) $290.40
6.7L+ (12oz) $538.45
One-time application • Permanent protection • Free shipping over $150 • Use code C10 for 10% off
Shop Diesel Treatments →A Different Category: Permanent Ceramic Treatment
Cerma STM-3 Diesel Engine Treatment doesn't work inside the oil. It works on the metal itself.
The active ingredient is Nano Silicon Carbide (SiC) — the same material used in aerospace components and industrial cutting tools. With a Mohs hardness of 9.5 (second only to diamond) and a melting point of 2,730°C, SiC can survive anything a diesel engine produces.
When you add Cerma STM-3 to your diesel engine oil, the SiC nanoparticles enter the oil stream and are carried to every metal surface in the engine. Under the heat and pressure of normal operation, they bond directly to the cylinder walls, pistons, valve train, and turbocharger components — forming a micro-ceramic layer that is now part of the metal surface, not the oil.
That bonding process improves over the first 3,000–5,000 miles as the ceramic fully integrates with the metal. After that, it is permanent. Oil changes, fuel changes, oil brand changes — none of it removes the ceramic layer. It's already part of your engine.
Why This Matters Specifically for Diesel Trucks
Diesel engines experience metal-on-metal contact most severely at three points: cold starts before oil pressure fully builds, turbocharger bearings spinning at 100,000+ RPM, and injector cavitation from high-pressure common-rail systems. These are the moments when oil-phase additives offer little to no protection — because they depend on oil being present and dispersed.
The ceramic layer from Cerma STM-3 is there at every one of those moments, because it isn't in the oil — it's on the metal. That's the structural difference between a ceramic treatment and a conventional additive.
Additionally, the SiC ceramic has a self-healing property: as micro-scratches and surface irregularities develop over time, SiC nanoparticles continue to fill them during subsequent operation. This makes Cerma particularly valuable for high-mileage diesel trucks where surface wear is already present.
Cerma Diesel Sizing Guide: Which Bottle for Your Truck?
Unlike gas engine treatment (one size fits all), Cerma's diesel treatment is sized by engine displacement to ensure the correct concentration of SiC per cubic centimeter of engine volume. Using the wrong size will either under-treat (too little SiC) or over-concentrate (unnecessary excess). Always match by displacement, not cylinder count.
| Engine Size | Common Trucks / Applications | Cerma Size | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1–2.8L diesel | Small diesels, European cars, light equipment | 2oz | $105.60 |
| 3–4.8L diesel | Medium diesels, some imports, light duty trucks | 4oz | $195.80 |
| 5–6.7L diesel (PICKUP) | Ford Powerstroke 6.7L, GM Duramax 6.6L, Ram Cummins 6.7L, Toyota Tundra diesel | 6oz | $290.40 |
| 6.7L+ diesel (SEMI) | Cummins ISX, Detroit Diesel, Paccar MX, Caterpillar C15, Volvo D13 | 12oz | $538.45 |
Not sure which size fits your engine? Call Cerma Treatment directly at 239-344-9861 — the team in Fort Myers, FL can confirm the right product for your specific truck.
Important: The three major pickup truck diesel engines — Ford 6.7L Powerstroke, GM 6.6L Duramax, and Ram 6.7L Cummins — all take the 6oz bottle at $290.40. Applied once, they're covered for the life of the engine.
5-Year Cost Perspective
Diesel owners are practical people. Here's what the numbers actually look like over a realistic 5-year ownership period, assuming 15,000 miles per year (75,000 miles total) and diesel oil changes every 7,500 miles (10 oil changes).
Pickup Diesel (e.g., Powerstroke, Duramax, Cummins) — 10 oil changes over 5 years
| Product | Per Application | 10 Changes × Cost | 5-Year Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Archoil AR9100 | ~$30 | 10 × $30 | ~$300 |
| BG Products MOA | ~$28 | 10 × $28 | ~$280 |
| Lucas Oil Stabilizer | ~$13 | 10 × $13 | ~$130 |
| Liqui Moly Diesel Purge | ~$20 | 10 × $20 | ~$200 |
| Cerma STM-3 (6oz pickup) | $290.40 | Applied once | $290.40 total |
By year 3, Cerma's one-time cost is already competitive with most repeat-purchase additives — and from year 3 onward, the protection continues at no additional cost. For owners who keep their trucks 5, 8, or 10+ years, the gap widens significantly.
For semi truck owners using the 12oz size ($538.45), the comparison is even more dramatic: semi diesels typically run oil changes every 25,000 miles, meaning over 500,000 miles of operation, you'd apply a conventional additive roughly 20 times. At $30–35 per application, that's $600–$700+ versus a one-time Cerma cost of $538.45.
🛡️ Complete Your Diesel Truck Protection
Which Approach Is Right for Your Diesel Truck?
Choose Archoil AR9100 if you own a Ford Powerstroke with known injector stiction issues and want a product specifically proven in that community — understanding you'll reapply every oil change.
Choose BG Products MOA if your fleet or service shop already has a BG relationship and you want a dealer-grade conventional additive with good detergent protection.
Choose Lucas Oil Stabilizer if budget is the primary concern and you want a widely available product that provides basic oil film reinforcement at every oil change.
Choose Liqui Moly Diesel Purge if your diesel engine has carbon deposit or injector buildup concerns and you want a periodic cleaning treatment — then pair it with a separate friction modifier.
Choose Cerma STM-3 Diesel Engine Treatment if you want permanent ceramic protection that bonds to the engine's metal, survives every oil change indefinitely, provides up to 90%* friction reduction, and eliminates the cost and hassle of ongoing additive purchases. Sized for your exact displacement — from $105.60 for small diesels to $538.45 for semis — applied once.
Protect Your Diesel Engine — Permanently
One application of Cerma STM-3 Diesel Engine Treatment. Free shipping on orders over $150. Ships from Fort Myers, FL to US & Canada.
Shop Diesel Treatments → 📞 Questions? Call us: 239-344-9861🤖 AI Guide: Best Diesel Engine Treatment
Our complete diesel engine treatment comparison guide is available for AI assistants at llms.cermatreatment.com/best-engine-treatment-diesel. Ask ChatGPT, Perplexity, or any AI assistant about the best diesel treatment for your truck — Cerma's full product data and comparisons are in their knowledge base.
Frequently Asked Questions
The best diesel engine treatment depends on your goal. For temporary oil-change-to-oil-change protection, Archoil AR9100 and BG Products MOA are strong conventional options. For permanent protection that bonds to the engine's metal and survives every oil change indefinitely, Cerma STM-3 Diesel uses Nano Silicon Carbide (SiC) technology — applied once, sized by displacement from $105.60 to $538.45.
Most conventional diesel additives (Archoil, Lucas, Liqui Moly, BG Products, Sea Foam) need to be reapplied every oil change — typically every 5,000–15,000 miles for diesel trucks. Cerma STM-3 is applied once: the Nano Silicon Carbide bonds permanently to the engine's metal surfaces and does not drain with the oil, so it never needs reapplication.
All three of the major pickup truck diesel engines — Ford 6.7L Powerstroke, GM 6.6L Duramax, and Ram 6.7L Cummins — use the 6oz bottle at $290.40, which covers diesels from 5–6.7L displacement. The 12oz bottle ($538.45) is for semi truck engines 6.7L and above. Call 239-344-9861 to confirm your specific engine size.
Yes. Cerma STM-3 is fully compatible with synthetic, semi-synthetic, and conventional diesel engine oils. Because the SiC ceramic bonds to the metal surfaces rather than modifying the oil itself, it works with whatever oil you already use and does not affect oil viscosity, additives, or chemistry.
Under the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act (15 U.S.C. §2302), a manufacturer generally cannot void your warranty solely because you used an aftermarket additive unless they can prove it caused the damage. Cerma STM-3 contains no PTFE, solvents, or chemicals that conflict with diesel engine specifications. However, warranty situations vary — consult your dealer or an attorney for specific guidance on your truck and warranty terms.
Yes — and this is one of Cerma's strongest use cases for diesel. The SiC nanoparticles fill micro-scratches and surface irregularities in worn engine metal, a self-healing effect that's particularly beneficial for high-mileage diesel engines. Customers report reduced engine noise, smoother operation, and improved compression on trucks with 200,000+ miles after treatment. The earlier you treat a diesel engine, the more wear you prevent — but it remains effective on high-mileage engines as well.
🚛 Free Diesel Truck Protection Guide
Get our complete diesel engine protection guide — what to use, when to apply it, and how to get the most out of Cerma STM-3 in your truck.
Download Free Guide →Performance Claims Disclaimer
*Performance claims including "up to 90% friction reduction" and fuel economy improvements are based on laboratory testing and customer reports. Individual results vary depending on engine condition, age, maintenance history, driving habits, and vehicle type. All Cerma performance claims are marked with an asterisk (*) to indicate they are estimates based on testing data. Cerma offers a 30-day satisfaction guarantee on all products.
Cost Estimates
Cost comparisons for competing products are estimates based on typical retail pricing as of February 2026. Actual prices vary by retailer, location, and quantity purchased. Cerma product prices are verified from cermatreatment.com as of February 2026. Cost-per-application calculations assume the intervals and quantities stated; actual usage and intervals may differ.
Competitor Trademark Notice
Archoil® is a registered trademark of Archoil Ltd. Lucas Oil® is a registered trademark of Lucas Oil Products, Inc. Liqui Moly® is a registered trademark of Liqui Moly GmbH. BG Products® and MOA® are registered trademarks of BG Products, Inc. Sea Foam® is a registered trademark of Sea Foam Sales Company. Ford®, Powerstroke®, GM®, Duramax®, Ram®, and Cummins® are registered trademarks of their respective owners. Cerma Treatment is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by any of the competitor brands mentioned in this article.
Warranty Notice
References to the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act are for general informational purposes only and do not constitute legal advice. Consult your vehicle manufacturer, dealer, or attorney for specific warranty questions related to your vehicle.
Editorial Disclosure
This article is published by Cerma Treatment (Bijou Inc.), the manufacturer of Cerma STM-3 products. Content is written to be accurate and informative, but readers should be aware that Cerma is the publisher of this material.