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#41
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Magnets on the fuel line intake
I once had a magnetic driven car. Actually two cars, toy cars, both with a magnets. Depending on direction of the first car did the other car goes away or comes back aginst the first car. No external power, or?? Magnetic force will never ever add power to something. It is a force a lot similar to gravity. It will help the car to go downhill but it will also come a uphill. The trick is to fool the car that it always is a bit downhill. It can be done with bigger rear wheels or holding a magnet in front of the car. As a carrot in front of a donkey. A lot of magnetic force is added to the fuel in a modern car due magnetic field around the electric injection coil. It does not harm the fuel despite that the magnetic field comes in very close contact with fuel. A magnet close around gasoline hose will result in a lot of magnetic fuel in the gas tank due to that most of the fuel is returned to the gas tank in an injection system. If two such magnetic cars comes cloes to each other will fuel be sucked to to the tank with strongest magnetic force and result in less fuel consumtion for that car. Magnetic carbon exist. It requires very sensitive instruments to prove this effect as it is a extreme small effect and also requires a unusal form of carbon. Several 1000 times less then the force from gravity. If gas tank is placed 10 feets below the car could it reduce fuel consumtion due to gravity makes it hard to pump fuel high enough? Electric fields in a combustion chamber can reduce some carbon gases. Throw in a magnet also...and it will reduce every thing. /Alf |
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#42
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Magnets on the fuel line intake
In article >,
Alf.F > wrote: > I once had a magnetic driven car. Actually two cars, toy cars, both > with a magnets. Depending on direction of the first car did the other > car goes away or comes back aginst the first car. No external power, > or?? > Magnetic force will never ever add power to something. It is a force a > lot similar to gravity. It will help the car to go downhill but it > will also come a uphill. The trick is to fool the car that it always > is a bit downhill. It can be done with bigger rear wheels or holding a > magnet in front of the car. As a carrot in front of a donkey. > > A lot of magnetic force is added to the fuel in a modern car due > magnetic field around the electric injection coil. It does not harm > the fuel despite that the magnetic field comes in very close contact > with fuel. > > A magnet close around gasoline hose will result in a lot of magnetic > fuel in the gas tank due to that most of the fuel is returned to the > gas tank in an injection system. If two such magnetic cars comes cloes > to each other will fuel be sucked to to the tank with strongest > magnetic force and result in less fuel consumtion for that car. > > Magnetic carbon exist. It requires very sensitive instruments to prove > this effect as it is a extreme small effect and also requires a unusal > form of carbon. Several 1000 times less then the force from gravity. > If gas tank is placed 10 feets below the car could it reduce fuel > consumtion due to gravity makes it hard to pump fuel high enough? > > Electric fields in a combustion chamber can reduce some carbon gases. > Throw in a magnet also...and it will reduce every thing. > > /Alf LOL! I tried putting a big magnet in the combustion chamber but it just went "THUD!" -- Google is a pro-spamming service. I will not see your reply if you use Google. |
#43
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Magnets on the fuel line intake
Here are the latest results in terms of using these magnets:
The car is a 1994 Audi 80 Saloon equiped with a 1.9 TDi rated at 90 HP (in fact 105 HP) running on diesel fuel. The car has 230 000 km. Beforehand, without the magnets, in the UK, the car was doing from 7 to 7.2 L / 100 km on motorways. I had checked that several times on trips to the outscirts (fair centre) of Birmingham, Manchester and Liverpool airport starting from Lancaster. I have driven 4500 km throughout Europe and Turkey from Lancaster to Morphou in Cyprus with a heavy car fully loaded including a 450 L roof box and it did 6.5 L / 100 km and this includes crossing several mountain ranges, driving nervously in french, italian and Turkish cities as well. We could say that we were on mixed driving. I have now completed a test mostly on motorways around Cyprus but also including city driving in Lefkosia and the car did just below 6 L / 100 km. We can say that the magnets have reduced the fuel conusmption by just more than 14 %. If you read the magnet documentation, they advocate savings around 15 % which means that I have reached them. Apart from that I can really appreciate the added punch that the diesel has now in the low revs which means that city driving is much more pleasant. Therefore, I do conclude on these two lines: 1- these magnets are really functionning as far as I am concerned and I will keep them 2- there is enough evidence to go further with investigations, I set up a lab demonstration to launch my own instrumented tests and publish them in the open domain (that is the role of free public Engineering Schools) Now, it is up to you to decide if 30 euros is worth spending on a device that can add punch (meaning more HP) and also save up to 14 % on your petrol bill. Luc Rolland |
#44
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Magnets on the fuel line intake
On Oct 5, 11:58*pm, laurentien > wrote:
[100% bull**** snipped] > Luc Rolland Without hard proof, Luc, your claims are garbage. Get back to us when you have hard data. E.P. |
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