No, as I said, pet ether = naphtha. It would have a much higher XlogP, as naphtha, so it would work for freeze precipitation.
Did you guys even bother doing a simple google search? It would also tell you that pet ether is like naphtha and that its not an ether.
In chemistry, you cannot suppose something is equivalent to some other chemical (for example pet ether = some other ether) just because of the name, you're bound to make serious mistakes like this. Please research

The only issue, which is regardless of being pet ether or naphtha or whatever, is that any new solvent being used might be pure or it might have additives or what not. Different solvents are sold for different purpouses so even if theoretically its something you want, it might have unwanted additives or mixes. For example some solvents sold as 'fuels' can have anti-rust inhibitors which might be toxic, or certain naphtha might have mixed in aromatics (like xylene) which will make it impossible to freeze precipitate and it will pull more stuff than just dmt, etc. So its not just because the main name on the label is familiar that you can automatically use it.
Thats why with every solvent you are using for the first time, you have to thoroughly check it in many ways (Evap test, read label, try to find msds of product, etc)
and thats exactly why we have this thread here and the links in the second post there:
https://www.dmt-nexus.me...aspx?g=posts&t=14772Please check thoroughly any solvent or chemical you are going to use.