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Pre-heating the fuel gets it ready to phase change easier.
Mike, because you cannot hear my tone of voice by reading words onscreen, I'm afraid this is going to sound like an attack, and that is absolutely not what I intend. Please keep that in mind as you read my comments here.
Now:
Until there is evidence, repeating this claim about pre-heating the fuel will not imbue it with validity. Several principles of physics and numerous controlled EPA tests tend to argue against the claim. So...let's have some evidence, please.
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The real key here is tuning for the differences. Any time you change something, you need to tune for the change.
That makes sense, certainly, but it's not a simple either/or question, as I will elaborate below.
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EPA testing mandates that no other changes be made after an alteration is made.
That is reasonable and proper, because it is absolutely essential to keep all variables constant except the device or modification under examination. That's the only way to obtain definitive evidence of what the device or modification does, if anything.
Now, you are correct that if a device or modification works in such a manner that ancillary modifications or adjustments are warranted, facilitated, or necessitated, then all such modifications and/or adjustments ought to be made and then the tests run again.
However, and this is the important part, if additional modifications and/or adjustments are made, then it's not enough just to run the simple mileage and basic "smog check" style emission tests that suffice to tell if there's any real and significant benefit to the device or modification. As a matter of law, the complete Federal emissions certification test battery must be run, because what you've done in that case is altered the vehicle's parameters and adjustments from their Federally-certified configuration.
What is more, driveability and performance factors are entirely absent from this discussion so far—more on this point below.
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back in the '70s when the fuel heater was tested, jets weren't allowed to be leaned out to compensate, timing wasn't allowed to be retarded to compensate for the change
That's not altogether true. If you will sift through the many EPA fuel economy device/modification tests available at
this link, you will see that EPA followed all installation instructions supplied with the various devices and systems submitted for test,
including making adjustments to the carburetion and ignition timing, and tabulated the test results with
and without those ancillary adjustments.
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For what it's worth, I teach fuel economy classes where almost everything the class touches gets 2X mileage.
That is certainly very impressive, and I have no reason to doubt this what you say, but there is a missing link between your claim that heating the fuel is beneficial and your claim to be able to double a vehicle's fuel economy. There is no evidence to support the implication that the second claim is true in part due to the first claim.
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We have had a '98 Breeze that went from 38 to 78 mpg, a '99 Pontiac Grand Am that went from 33 to 68, a '97 Ford F-150 with the 4.6 that went from 16 to 31, and a '95 Ford F-150 4X4 that went from 13 to 33. My personal Duster years ago got a best of 44.7, maintaining an average of about 37 overall. My current '84 Charger got 45 last tank with a worn out engine. On tuning, the Grand Am only got 47 after the class was finished with it. I went back and tuned it later and milked it up to the 68 with only the tuning changes.
All of this makes my mouth water, since I have a very thirsty '89 318 Dodge pickup and would be delighted to get even 20% better mileage out of it. But there are some important questions that have not yet been addressed, and are still begging for detailed, solid answers:
•For each of these vehicles, what was the effect on regulated emissions (total HC, CO, NOx) and indicator emissions (CO2)? Whether upward or downward, was any of the vehicles rendered noncompliant with Federal emission standards for the year and model of the vehicle?
•For each of these vehicles, what was the effect on driveability (ease or difficulty of starting, presence or absence of tendency to hesitate or stall or ping, smoothness of engine idle and general running, acceleration, and performance --- all cold, warm, and hot)?
•For each of these vehicles, what other potential tradeoffs were made in the quest for improved fuel economy? For example, when tires are inflated well above ordinary pressures, fuel economy increases at the cost of reduced traction and tire life.
In closing, I want to reiterate some statements I've made several times about your work:
•It is obvious and evident from the photos you've shown us and the descriptions you and some of your customers have given that when you work on a vehicle, you do so in a thoughtful, careful, skillful, thorough manner with great attention to detail. On that basis, I would be quite comfortable contracting for your services.
•I
want to believe your claims. I really, genuinely do. I think most reasonable people do, too. The difficulties as I see them are (1) lack of real evidence, and (2) a mixture of claims and products that have sound theoretical foundation, and those that really just don't. If all your claims and products were theoretically sound, it'd be easier to take a leap of faith and try them out. But some of them just aren't, and that compounds the lack-of-evidence problem: Not only is there no evidence to back up the claims for products and mods that seem to have no basis in valid science, but also the dubious ideas and claims cast doubt over the validity and veracity of all the rest of the products and mods, even those that might have some scientific validity.