I've seen in advertisements, water injection systems from time to time-sold for giving a car far better gas mileage; though haven't known of anyone really using these, which used to be available through places like J. C. Whitney, and seemed to be a little on the flaky side of technology, and/or manufacture, etc.
These put water directly into the gasoline just before combustion; to say more accurately, in the fuel line before the carburetor if I'm not mistaken-rather than the intake manifold, though perhaps that would be the case as an alternative, if my memory isn't solid? Something of the sort.
Which I think is theoretically sound, if perhaps questionable enough in practice; though probably there hasn't been any great development of the technology, other than the aforementioned aftermarket applications.
I'm curious if anyone has more knowledge, experience or history of this? Probably something originated during the 1950s, is a guess? I'm wondering if similar to my toilet paper oil filter, this may be another thing with definite virtues shunned and discouraged by corporate culture greedy for profitability.
These put water directly into the gasoline just before combustion; to say more accurately, in the fuel line before the carburetor if I'm not mistaken-rather than the intake manifold, though perhaps that would be the case as an alternative, if my memory isn't solid? Something of the sort.
Which I think is theoretically sound, if perhaps questionable enough in practice; though probably there hasn't been any great development of the technology, other than the aforementioned aftermarket applications.
I'm curious if anyone has more knowledge, experience or history of this? Probably something originated during the 1950s, is a guess? I'm wondering if similar to my toilet paper oil filter, this may be another thing with definite virtues shunned and discouraged by corporate culture greedy for profitability.
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