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Animal05 Animal05 is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jan 2007
Posts: 10
Default Magnetic fuel conditioners.....

Reginald P. Smithers III wrote:
Chuck Gould wrote:

On Jan 30, 10:26�am, "Reginald P. Smithers III"
wrote:

Reginald P. Smithers III wrote:
n.



I would be willing to bet it can be used as a snake oil.

If you want to know how effective the mfg'er and the dealer believe
check out the warranty
onhttp://marineengineparts.com/shopsite_sc/store/html/page462.html

"Dieseltx carries a "LIFETIME" warranty against manufacturing defects
and workmanship, does not cover improper installation or it's results. "

If Dieseltx really believe it worked, they would provide some kind of
minimum results. �It reminds me of all snake oils and their "customer
testimonials".



According to my contact at this company's local retail dealer, the
devices are being sold with a "satisfaction guarantee". IOW, put one
on, see if it works for you, and if it doesn't you get your money
back. My contact said that his company would not have agreed to carry
the item if it were not for the satsfaction guarantee. Like my, all he
has to go on are a list of satisfied customers and some general
understanding that it *might* work.


As someone else pointed out, according to the EPA, who has tested the
"magnetic fuel conditioners" they do not work and according to the FTC
they are scams, and all consumers should be skeptical of their "consumer
testimonials".

Reminds me of all the "consumer testimonials" provided by Slick 50.
After a few years it was found that Slick 50 actually damaged many engines.
The claims were proven false and Slick 50 agreed to settle out of court.
http://www.ftc.gov/opa/1997/07/slick.htm

If this magnetic fuel conditioner actually worked, the mfg'er could gain
some great PR by proving the EPA wrong.



If the actually worked the auto manuf. would be all over it to improve
their CAFE requirements.


It is also reasonable to assume
the EPA would love to endorse a product that actually increased fuel
efficiency and reduced pollution. It is also reasonable to expect boat
mfg'ers would jump on a very inexpensive product that would allow them
to provide better fuel economy. Everything about this product says scam.

While your retailer might be providing a satisfaction guarantee, the
mfg'er is not as confident about the product as the the retailer.

When the EPA states magnetic fuel conditioners are a scam, it really
isn't in the best interest of a magazine to provide free PR for a
product that the experts believe will not work.

I would have thought you would have avoided this product like the
plague, even if it is being retailed by a local store who does advertise
in your mag.