I am one of those noobs who has gotten their 1st street bike (5000 miles and about 1 year ago)
And I don't know sh!t from shinola, but I am learning from all the great members on this site.
And I will one day feel at ease pulling my carb and cleaning it by hand, just not today. I'm getting experience each time I work with my mechanic and learning more so I will be able to do most maintence myself.
I have been watching youtube and reading wikipedia so I am better educated on what a wet-clutch is and how it works.
I don't think using seafoam in the oil is a bad thing. So many people use seafoam in wet-clutch machines. Just search around the web for biker forums.
Just can't come up with any reason why that would make the clutch slip.
I can see it cleaning off the gunk on the plates, but not making it slip.
If anything seems it would make shifting smoother with greater ease of grabbing the "raised-gooves" on the plates.
Open to hearing reasons why one would say it would cause damage to our wet-clutch.
Would love to see some documentation of seafoam wrecking a wet-clutch. (not really, but if there is a claim... proof to back it up please)