Has anyone used this product before?? I've heard some good reports about them and wondering if its worthwhile looking into...
http://www.performafuel.com/performa/default.htm
Any help or opinions is appreciated
Nick
Moderators: toaddog, TWISTY, V8Patrol, Moderators
I have done quite a bit of research into them. And some countries (forget which at the moment) have made it illegal for these companies to advertise any fuel saving claims.Floody_1985 wrote:Errrr, ever done any research into them, or known someone who uses them dude???? I have one fitted to a vehicle of ours, and damn straight does it work! Highway driving would normally see a tank of juice go in about 475-500km's. Road test the other day after a couple of months of having it installed, we achieved about 650km's out of the tank.
Floody
RUFF wrote:Beally STFU Your becoming a real PITA.
The whole point about SUBCONSCIOUS is that you don't think about it...Floody_1985 wrote:Haven't even touched my driving habits one bit. I'm only a young bloke, so don't mind a bit of foot on the accelerator. Sure as hell haven't even thought about this thing being on the car while driving it.
Floody
RUFF wrote:Beally STFU Your becoming a real PITA.
It can be seen that the improvements after fitting the Broquet are extremely small, and in most cases the benefit remains after the device has been removed. Which? believed that this was because the cars were relatively new and still running-in - economy is therefore improving as the engine friction reduces. If the improvement were really due to the Broquet, the economy should have returned to "baseline" after it was removed.
Broquet's response to this was that the tests were "unrepresentative" as they had used "modern petrol-engined cars". But remember that these cars were built in 1993, and so today would be classed as 11 years old - yet nowhere on Broquet's web site does it state that small (or zero) economy gain would be expected on post-1992 vehicles.
RUFF wrote:Beally STFU Your becoming a real PITA.
Sure the principle of a catalyst works, but these devices don't work because:DAMKIA wrote:See also :Fitch
SSDD
Proven that the catalyst does actually work in a chemical sense, but would require the surface area of a football field (~15000 square metres) at room temp to 80 degrees Celsius to actually have any real impact on the average 6 cyl vehicle.
I'll try and dig up the research...............
Only REAL proof would be a double blind test (standard methodology for testing hypotheses). Supplying a mix of "duds" in with the "live" ones, with only an independant third party knowing which is which.
The mechanism by which catalytic devices often claim to work is by converting long-chain fuel molecules to short-chain ones. It is of course true that petrol and diesel consist of many different molecules, ranging from large ones such as octane (C8H18) to small ones such as butane (C4H10). Longer molecules can in theory be broken down into shorter ones, though this process normally requires heat and pressure, as well as the presence of a catalyst. But even if the fuel "saving" device does break the molecules down, this does not imply improved fuel consumption or emissions.
Firstly, the precise blend of components of modern petrol (and indeed diesel) is quite carefully "tuned" to match the requirements of the engine. This even involves selling different petrol in summer and winter to compensate for differing temperatures! The proportion of the fuel that evaporates at different temperatures (the "boiling curve") is determined by the blend of high boiling point (long-chain) components and low boiling point (short-chain) components. If the proportions are altered, then the boiling characteristics of the fuel will change. The likely effects are either poor cold starting or poor hot starting, with increased emissions in each case.
Secondly, short-chain molecules do not generally produce significantly more energy when burnt. The calorific values of most hydrocarbon fuels are around 44 - 46 MJ/kg, with smaller molecules producing only slightly more energy than larger ones. Claims that smaller molecules burn "better", "more completely", or "more energetically" are not supported by experimental data (consider, for example, the fuel economy of LPG vehicles).
RUFF wrote:Beally STFU Your becoming a real PITA.
There were differences - time of year (temperature) between measurements, driving conditions and speeds/type of driving, when the vehicle was last serviced, etc, etc, etc. A few of these factors combined could easily account for the difference. And your measurement cannot be considered accurate by any stretch of the imagination - a rough fuel consumption estimate from before fitting, and the results from one single tank afterwards. Regardless of your results, a sample size of one still doesn't prove anything. And neither does a mate of a mate who uses them and supposedly has good results. No reliable independant testing has shown that these devices work (see the results of scientific testing above and below).Floody_1985 wrote:Engine oil was the same, tyre pressures are about the same, in fact, the only thing that has changed is by installing one of these things.
One of the local electricity companies (Country Energy) uses it on some of their vehicles, and apparently they work for them. Another large trucking company I know of uses them as well. Same results.
500km versus 650km's....... I don't care how much you change your driving habits by, that's very very difficult to achieve by just doing that.
RUFF wrote:Beally STFU Your becoming a real PITA.
The first results I posted were from a study in 1993. That recent enough. Do you really think these devices have changed at all during that time???Floody_1985 wrote:A web site that gives me reports of which the majority are in the early 80's and late 70's, doesn't seem to mean much to me given the increase in engine technology since then,.
And mate, given we have owned that particular car for 4 years now, we have never, ever, driven for 650km's on one tank of fuel.
Stop being so critical and buy it and see if results are really there. It's got a 12 month money back guarantee, so what's to loose???
RUFF wrote:Beally STFU Your becoming a real PITA.
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