posted to rec.boats
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 3,117
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Magnetic fuel conditioners.....
On Jan 30, 11:01�am, David Scheidt wrote:
Chuck Gould wrote:
:On Jan 30, 10:08???am, David Scheidt wrote:
: Chuck Gould wrote:
:
: :I was inspired to do some research on this subject after encountering
: :a fellow selling these things at the local boat show. What attracted
: :by attention wasn't the guy from Florida peddling the devices, but a
: :well-known and respected local company representing it as well.
:
: If these things worked, the people who sell them would commission real
: independent testing labs to do well-designed studies. ?The studies would
: show if they work or not, in terms of reduced fuel consumption, lowered
: emissions, increased power, reduced contamination in the fuel,
: improved sex life, or whatever else they're claiming this week. ?No
: one has done such studies. ?Instead, what you've got is
: pseudo-scientific techno-babble, unverifiable anecdotal claims,
: smoke, and a few mirrors.
:I don't claim that they do or do not work, as I have no personal
:experience with one.
:You seem to feel that they cannot work, apparently also without
ersonal experience but based upon the lack of a test from an
:indepedent organization.
The people that sell these things make specific claims: "Better fuel
economy!", "More power!", "Reduced emissions", etc. *Fuel economy,
power production, and tailpipe emissions are all testable by widely
known, well understood, and generally agreed to be useful and valid
methods. *Fuel magnets are not a new idea; people have been selling
them for 50 years or more. *If they worked, you'd know about it,
because engine manufacturors would include them in their product.
Once one vendor did, everyone else would have to follow suit -- all
things being equal, would you use the engine that is rated for 10%
more fuel use? *
I don't believe they work, because I know enough physics to understand
that the claims people make are equivalant to claiming the moon is
made of green cheese.
:Personally, if I were using one and noticed a difference I would feel
:that my direct personal experience was all the proof I personally
:needed. But that's just me, and other people would require more proof
:than personal experience. Even so, I'm half tempted to call or email
:some of those indiviuals on the website and see if they are *still*
:convinced that there's some benefit to their magnetic fuel treatment
:sytems. But you're right, even their anecdotal claims are
:"unverifiable".
So you ask someone, who's just spent a silly amount of money having
one of these things installed, whether it works. *Of course they're
going to say it does. *To say it doesn't, would mean admiting that
they'd been taken in on the scam. *People don't like to admit they've
made mistakes that cost them money. *
David
How would an acceptable test from an independent organization differ
from
this data, compiled by a company certified by the California Air
Resouce Board?
http://www.diesel-fuels.com/pdf/lgx-test.pdf
Please understand, I'm not defending the data or insisting that these
devices work, simply wondering what the standard for an independent
test would be?
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