Stop attacking the man, rather help him to prove or disprove the theory.
So, it seems he is already experimenting, so all on this forum can gain something from that.
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No. YouTube has a bunch of visual explanation of how the scammers want you think it works.Utube has a bunch of visual proof of how it works
Yup. Over the years, various safety, environmental and practical concerns have eaten away at the potential MPG improvement of technological improvements.I agree that there are a multitude of snake oil salesmen pushing hydrogen generation on the car. Everything I know tells me that is should be a waste of time.
But I know that it is possible to get more MPG from the fuel we are burning. Why, because I have seen a few cars over the years that point in that direction.
1963 Ford Galaxy 500 XL 390, factory demonstrator, best described as a factory hot rod, 22 MPG and the thing had loads of power and torque.
1971 Ford LTD 390, 21 MPG 2BL carb and catalytic converter. Lame performance for the size of the engine.
1977 Ford F150 351M, headers, holly 4 bbl, eldebroch performer intake, unknown cam. 19 MPG
These were all at highway speeds 65-75 MPH.
I was 7 years old when dad got the 63. So mostly I recall what I heard about it. I do recall a shredded tire or two. I drove the 71 and owned the 77 pickup.
20 and 30 latter the numbers for the fleet are the same or worse.
My original question (and, still is unanswered) is: Is there a known or theoretical, practical method for infusing something like gasoline with additional hydrogen or hydrogen and oxygen in such a way that will give a net increase in efficiency than you get from simply summing the energies of the two. In other words...can you make the fuel itself more efficient in releasing its energy?
The energy is certainly there but, can it be accessed?
You've confused peak power with fuel economy. Usually they are at cross purposes.We have discussed it before, but turbine engines use a water-meth injection to increase their power during take-off. The major reason for that is the cooling effect of the water that evaporates.
Yup. Over the years, various safety, environmental and practical concerns have eaten away at the potential MPG improvement of technological improvements.
I think this sort of gain could be had with the current engines if more care were taken during design and manufacturing to ensure that they are all up to the same quality.
Yes it clears up your post a bit. I was confused by the fact that this thread was almost exclusively about economy.mneary, actually I've mentioned during take-off.
So I actually meant take-off only.
At level flight turbine engines (all derivatives) are most efficient around 90% thrust, or just under 90%, if you really are fussy.
The water-meth injection is literally used for seconds during take-off to help squeeze some extra juice out of the system.
Does that clear up my previous post a bit?
Yes it clears up your post a bit. I was confused by the fact that this thread was almost exclusively about economy.
Sounds like they were fairly heavily modified.1963 Ford Galaxy 500 XL 390, factory demonstrator, best described as a factory hot rod, 22 MPG and the thing had loads of power and torque.
1977 Ford F150 351M, headers, holly 4 bbl, eldebroch performer intake, unknown cam. 19 MPG
Sounds like they were fairly heavily modified.
From just the horsepower specs, you'd expect the Galaxy to get way crappier mileage than the F150. How reliable is your MPG data?:
F150 1977-1979 - 351 CID (5.8 L) 335 V8, 150-163 hp (Wiki)
1963 Ford Galaxy 427 V8 425 bhp @ 6000 rpm, 480 lb-ft.
Then the performance of the Galaxy wasn't that great considering the BHP is was putting out. Must have been a very heavy car:
Performance: 427/425: 0-60 in 7.4 sec, 1/4 mile in 15.4 sec @ 95mph
Source:
**broken link removed**
Probably the gas mileage had more to do with the gearing than anything else. I would assume that the F150 was geared a lot lower than the Galaxy. Maybe the Galaxy's engine had a higher compression ratio. Just guessing at this point as I'm no expert on that era's vehicles. I seem to remember that they lowered the compression ratio in later years to reduce emissions at the expense of fuel economy.The 63 and 71 both had 390's. Both were as they came from the factory but the 63 was a demonstrator and the factory had its way with it prior to shipping it to the dealer. No 427's. The first two were my dad's and the F150 was mine.
Judging from past experience: I can trust you.3v0 said:How much can you trust me ?
The Galaxy was a demonstrator setup to impress people with its acceleration. I could check with my brother to see what the ratio was. The model came out between normal model years. After my dad owned the car for 6 months ford used it in a car show. The fixed all the paint chips and took it 300 miles to a ford day event. During the event the car was run on a race track in West Fargo ND to impress the car buying public. I know the clocked the top end but I do not recall what it was. Some figure north of 120. It was a beast and still made impressive MPG figures for its weight.Probably the gas mileage had more to do with the gearing than anything else. I would assume that the F150 was geared a lot lower than the Galaxy.
As I said it was a factory hot rod. I am quite sure ford used a high compression. I remember the car but since I was 6 or 7 did not take part in the interesting things that were done with it. After owning the car a year my dad got tired of my brothers racing it and had it detuned by the dealer! The MPG went down to stock.Maybe the Galaxy's engine had a higher compression ratio. Just guessing at this point as I'm no expert on that era's vehicles. I seem to remember that they lowered the compression ratio in later years to reduce emissions at the expense of fuel economy.
Judging from past experience: I can trust you.
It's called a small motorcycle.Generally, this is a good thing. I mean, would you want to drive an 80MPG deathtrap?
It's called a small motorcycle.
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