Ultimate fuel additive? | Page 3 | FerrariChat

Ultimate fuel additive?

Discussion in 'Technical Q&A' started by Gary48, Nov 19, 2005.

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  1. ernie

    ernie Two Time F1 World Champ
    Lifetime Rossa Owner

    Nov 19, 2001
    22,620
    The Brickyard
    Full Name:
    The Bad Guy
    Yes this is true, it even says so right on the can.

    None the less the test still goes on.

    This would have been a great episode for the show "Myth Busters". But since we can't wait for the show, we'll just bust the myth here.
     
  2. Perfusion

    Perfusion F1 Rookie

    Oct 16, 2004
    4,151
    Marietta, GA
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    Aaron
    Fair enough... I suppose that if I had purchased a TR over the summer instead of a $700,000 house, I'd be "in the club" - but since I *didnt'*, I'm not worthy of having an opinion in this thread. For the record, my opinion would be the same regardless of what kind of car was in the garage.

    Until then, I guess I'll go back to my models...

    P.S. - somebody PM Carbon and let him know he's not allowed to oppose anybody's opinion on this board who owns a Ferrari - the owners can stand up for themselves. In fact, make sure he just sticks to his black on black Enzo obsession, and discusses nothing more... :rolleyes:
     
  3. Air_Cooled_Nut

    Air_Cooled_Nut Formula Junior

    Nov 25, 2004
    952
    Portland, Oregon
    Full Name:
    Toby Erkson
    Do you add the additive EVERY TIME? Because the proper way to test is to change just ONE thing. Every variable counts and you likely just skewed your results.
     
  4. ernie

    ernie Two Time F1 World Champ
    Lifetime Rossa Owner

    Nov 19, 2001
    22,620
    The Brickyard
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    The Bad Guy
    I am adding ONLY the acetone, and ONLY using 87 octane.
     
  5. whturner

    whturner Formula Junior

    Nov 25, 2003
    315
    Western Pennsylvania
    Full Name:
    Warren Turner
    You might be substituting one source of Acetone for another, if Tectron contains acetone, as many of these additives apparently do. You might be able to tell by smell if the label does not say so (usually they say something like "contains petroleum distillates, of which acetone is one).

    Cheers
    Warren
     
  6. Gary48

    Gary48 Guest

    Dec 30, 2003
    940
    whturner, I don't recall ever saying that acetone was a secret, what I was refering to was another compound used in conjunction with acetone. I am not really sure this group is ready or I am not ready to discuss as yet.
    I have been doing a little research on acetone and what I've found is new to me. It seems that it is one of a vast groups of solvents that react with another one to produce a new set of substances (reactant) but also the compound that supplies the molecule,Ion, or free radical, which is considered as the attacking species in a chemical reaction (reagent). The solvent is conductive to collisions between the reactants and the reagents to transform the reactants to new products. Whew! that was a mouthful and not my words, just something that I read.
    So many compounds can act as catylysts or reagents and effect the main componant (Gasoline) and do more than just being there in physical presents. I don't pretend to have even a meager knowledge of petro-chemical reactions, but I know what I see from cause and effect, and I have seen changes from my initial experimentation, especially in the performance category.
    Later I will offer other information on other compounds that I think will be of bennefit, that I have mildly researched and have experimented with. Keep an open mind with a bit of scepticism and join in the adventure to become your own alchemist and learn one way or the other.
    The site that I stumbled on when I stated this thread was certainly the catylyst for thought, but like everything we read, there is truth and falsehoods all in the same paragraph. It is through intelligent discussion and experimentation that we find what we are looking for.
     
  7. whturner

    whturner Formula Junior

    Nov 25, 2003
    315
    Western Pennsylvania
    Full Name:
    Warren Turner
    Hi Gary:

    I know you didn't say acetone was new - I was rebutting the article you asked us to review. And it certainly tried to leave that impression. The problem with the article was the lack of knowlege of basic science. I didn't see anything I would even call a falsehood - that would imply deliberate intent to deceive rather than being misinformed about some scientific principles.
    I support you and all the people who do research: how could I not, after spending most of my working life as a researcher.
    My advice is to always start with basic principles. For the combustion process that is thermodynamics, which will govern how much power is produced for any set of conditions. And of course, more energy/power for a given fuel input let you get better mileage. That is pretty easy to test in the laboratory. You could also if you had a dyno and the associated equipment to measure the temperatures, pressures, and combustion products.
    The issue of fuel additives and valve, injector, and cleaning of the entire fuel system, is more difficult, since it is so dependent on long term testing and you must be able to measure rather small differences.
    Keep after it - but be skeptical in the scientific sense as you go.

    Cheers
    Warren
     
  8. AEHaas

    AEHaas Formula 3

    May 9, 2003
    1,465
    Osprey, Florida
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    Ali E. Haas
    Every week there is another product that makes you younger, gives you 5 or 10 percent better gas milage, improves oil so as to diminish wear and get better fuel economy. 'These products come and go.

    It may be that some day a panacea will emerge but it will be on the evening news, many magazines and the real tests will be at SAE and others.

    For now I will use gas and oil without additives having hugh claims. This is safest for my cars. The day that a panacea comes out I will let you know and i will show you SAE and other articles to back up the claim.

    aehaas
     
  9. robertgarven

    robertgarven F1 Veteran
    Owner

    Feb 24, 2002
    5,322
    Ventura, California
    Full Name:
    Robert Garven
    my god I thought you said on your car!! now my paint is all gooy!! This is terrible. Dont try this at home!!!



























    :)
     
  10. Gary48

    Gary48 Guest

    Dec 30, 2003
    940
    Ali, where's this product that makes you younger? You'll get rich!
    Here's my current thinking. The site that I found stated that acetone works better on older cars with high milage. The reasonable man would assume that a high mile car that has never had any gas additives would have an accumulation of carbon on the backs of valves and combustion chambers, not to mention the ports. This is compounded by the fact that high mile cars will most likely have worn rings, valve guides and seals. This condition sets the stage for the most dramatic results from the use of acetone. I have taken high mile engines apart that had so much carbon on the backs of the valves that flow thru those ports had to have been restricted by 50%-60%. If acetone cleans as they say then 20%-30% gains in milage are very possible. These worst case motors stand to gain the most by freeing up the breathing and improving the combustion. Tight modern motors without huge mileage stand to gain the least with the exception of a little clean-up and performance boost from the extra octane and vaporization boost.
    I am sure in addition to the above, that there are very real differences between carburated cars and modern cars with a much more sophisticated contols of fuel injection and how acetone affects each.
     
  11. AEHaas

    AEHaas Formula 3

    May 9, 2003
    1,465
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    Ali E. Haas
    I do not see how acetone will diminish a built up carbon deposit. However, I can imagine that varnish build up on cylinder walls can be reduced over a long period of time. This would also assume that the source of the deposit was eliminated (use a better, newer gas and oil). The acetone may also result in oil dilution. This may increase your gas milage as a secondary effect.

    This whole thing assumes a very dirty engine that may best be treated by an overhaul for real and instant results.

    It sort of reminds me of the saying that if a little is good then a lot must be better. Vitamin B12 contains cyanide. A little is not only good but essential. A little more is bad. This is true of all additives making up the whole oil or gas product. Additives must be at just the right amount. An anti-wear oil additive may work as needed at one concentration but may actually be corrosive as an acid at a higher concentration.

    I am one who never uses additives in my oil or gas. The chemistry is just too interactive.

    An octane boost is only good if you can adjust the timing to take advantage of it.

    aehaas
     
  12. boffin218

    boffin218 Formula Junior

    Oct 8, 2005
    888
    Philadelphia
    Full Name:
    Chris
    My guess, based on the acetone notes on wikipedia.org, is that the acetone is acting as a fuel-injector cleaner. Many of the things they see can be attributed to dirty/clogged injectors - poor gas mileage, smoother running, etc. Anything that helps eliminate the deposits that can clog injectors would help fuel mileage and power, and even help prevent detonation.

    Just my $0.02
     
  13. whturner

    whturner Formula Junior

    Nov 25, 2003
    315
    Western Pennsylvania
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    Warren Turner
    As a scientific test - to show that acetone (or any other additive) can boost gas mileage by 20 - 30%, you need data showing that a 20 to 30% decrease had taken place as the car aged.
    Your hypothesis is that valves get dirty with age and mileage decreases - reversing this condition will restore mileage.
    You need to confirm both parts of this hypothesis.

    Cheers
    Warren
     
  14. boffin218

    boffin218 Formula Junior

    Oct 8, 2005
    888
    Philadelphia
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    Chris
    We would also have to answer the question 20 to 30% over what. Over manufacturer's specifications, the particular user's experience, the vehicle's previous tank of fuel, etc.
     
  15. Gary48

    Gary48 Guest

    Dec 30, 2003
    940
    whturner, no hypothesis needed. Its fact that this carbonization occurs. Do you have 50,000-100,000 miles for the hypothesis to prove it to yourself? it is a given and not theory. It occurs because the heat of combustion heats the valve and raw gas hits the back of the valve and a good portion of the gas passes into the combustion chamber, but some vaporizes upon hitting the hot surface and leaves varnish which then turns to carbon layer upon layer. This is the reason that additives are essencial for constant cleansing. The deposits that are formed are not formed as a smooth solid plug on the back of the valve, but rather as they grow they be come distorted and convoluted with a deep and tortuous suface being very rough and craigy. This surface is a huge barrier and disruption to flow and engine efficiency. These deposits, depending on engine condition and gasoline quality start to form immediately and without remedial treatment will diminish power and performance and milage within the first half of an engines life.
    It might be of interest that other compounds beside acetone disolve carbon. The primary compound in STP gas treatment is pyrines which do a very good job dissolving carbon. I have seen taxi fleet motors disassembled with and without STP gas treatment and what I have reported was evident in these motors. The treated motors were very clean everywhere.
    Many people will have opinions on what happens inside engines but only those who live inside them intimately Know for sure.
    I am not completely confident that acetone acomplishes the carbon dissolving, as others have said but I do know that other additives do.
     
  16. whturner

    whturner Formula Junior

    Nov 25, 2003
    315
    Western Pennsylvania
    Full Name:
    Warren Turner
    Hi Gary:

    I will stipulate that valves get dirty - I have seen quite a few myself. Think 100 K+ mile cars (prior to fuel injection) Also that additives TEND to keep then cleaner.
    But I thought your hypothesis was that 20 to 30% mileage increase was possible by cleaning them. Actually a clean (no pun intended) experiment would be to take a dirty engine whose mileage has been checked over a period of time - pull the heads and clean the carbon from the valves, and put it back on the road with no other modifications.

    Cheers
    Warren
     
  17. mk e

    mk e F1 World Champ

    Oct 31, 2003
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    I'm shocked...I just can't believe that adding an insignificant amount of a chemical that mostly has completely evaporated within a day or 2 didn't improve your mileage....it's almost like moving the car requires a specific amount of energy regardless of what chemical the energy is coming from and the engines efficency is primarily a fuction of heat transfer rates, flow, friction, and compression ratio and doesn't much care about the fuel...weird.

    :)
     
  18. don_xvi

    don_xvi F1 Rookie

    Nov 1, 2003
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    Don the 16th
    Remember that the claim is of a 30% fuel economy increase. The parts of the page I read indicated that this guy's neon was getting ~50mpg city. He doesn't claim that it helps by cleaning valves, and dirty valves can't explain that mileage claim. This isn't about cleaning valves or varnish, it's supposed to improve fuel economy way beyond what the car was ever capable of. Should be easy to evaluate!
     
  19. BigTex

    BigTex Seven Time F1 World Champ
    Owner Rossa Subscribed

    Dec 6, 2002
    79,406
    Houston, Texas
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    Bubba
    I knew I had just read about this...Autoweek, Denise McClugagge's column, recently.

    Acetone alters the surface tension of the gasoline, allowing better dispersment during the combustion process.

    It IS a heck of a solvent, we use it cleaning fibreglass resin, etc.......at this low concentration I don't think it's gonna remove existing carbon deposits...
     
  20. Mario Gonzalez

    Mario Gonzalez Formula 3

    Apr 13, 2004
    1,333
    Out of my mind
    the author recommended the additive.

    quote form author:

    "It has been reported that we only add acetone every other tankful. That was for test purposes only. We do the acetone every tankful. Then we add an equal amount of the Texaco/Chevron additive Techron right on top of the acetone. "
    unquote

    I feel that to properly conferm the author's claim, the test needs to be done exactly like he does it.
     
  21. Gary48

    Gary48 Guest

    Dec 30, 2003
    940
    Mario, agreed on your last post. During all my sifting through data on acetone, I ran into this: Acetone is highly reactive with many chemicals. Acetone peroxide is one very dangerous compound, it is highly explosive and a slight jar or friction will set it off. This compound is used by terrorists and takes a few of them out, which is a good thing.
    Acetone Peroxide is formed when Acetone, hydrogen peroxide and acid are brought together. Please folks don't try this in your gas tank at home. It just shows that chemistry can happen in your gas tank with the use of acetone. I really like Techtron and have used it often. It is one of the only compounds recommended by Porche.
    Just discovered that some solvents which dissolve substances that are insoluble in water are: Acetone, alcohol, formic acid, acetic acid, formamide, BTX, carbon disulfide, diemthyl sulfoxide, carbon tetrachloride, chloroform, ether, tetrahydrofuran, furfural, hexane and turpentine. My confidence is back with acetone
     
  22. boffin218

    boffin218 Formula Junior

    Oct 8, 2005
    888
    Philadelphia
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    Chris
    Checking out the acetone page on wikipedia shows that many people are making far smaller claims - 2 to 10% - for the use of acetone. Which raises questions of whether what they're seeing is statistically significant. The wiki page also talks about the problems with the surface tension claim (basically fuel has a pretty low surface tension to begin with and fuel in the cylinder is vaporized). But it makes sense as a detergent, though there are additives out there which will likely be better for engine plastics.
     
  23. Gary48

    Gary48 Guest

    Dec 30, 2003
    940
    Boffin, surface tention exists because the air flow in a port or any other surface creates drag at or near the surface, called the boundary layer. This term is often used in aerodynamics. Fuel in this air will likely adhere to the port wall and dribble along especially as the port turns and centrifical force causes some fuel in suspention to fall against the long side of the port. acetone being much more volatile might be providing the gasoline a bit of a lift in vaporization.
     
  24. ylshih

    ylshih Shogun Assassin
    Honorary Owner

    Mar 21, 2004
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    Perfusion did get a little aggressive in his tone, but I think Perfusion's point was that the motivation for someone to provide bad data on FChat would be primarily targetted against F-car owners. I don't think he was speaking "presumptiously" for owners by making that point. A lot of non-owner mechanics and specialists also frequent this board and the same comment you make could superficially apply to them if they interjected, but you probably wouldn't make it to them.

    As far as experimental data, a search finds this link with test data for many more cars than here...

    http://peswiki.com/index.php/Directory:Acetone_as_a_Fuel_Additive#Results.2C_Listed_Alphabetically_According_to_Manufacturer_--_Automobile

    Note that results are all over the board (mileage decrease, no change, mileage increase). This suggests something going on that uncontrolled experiments won't resolve.
     
  25. boffin218

    boffin218 Formula Junior

    Oct 8, 2005
    888
    Philadelphia
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    Chris
    Gary I'm not sure you've got your terms correct. What you're looking at is not "surface tension" (which is a measure of the cohesive properties of a molecule) but viscous drag.

    No matter, you're right, the effects viscous drag can produce atomized fuel (i.e. little droplets). My problem with an explanation that suggests that acetone reduces this lies in the fact that boundary layer drag is a product of three things: 1) the velocity of the gas/liquid in question 2) the viscosity of the gas/liquid in question and 3) the length over which the gas flows. Since 3 remains constant and 1) won't vary much, the only thing it is possible to change is the viscosity of the gas/fuel mixture. Given the small quantities in which it is added (0.15%) it doesn't seem to me that there would produce an appreciable change in the viscosity of the air/fuel mixture - or at least one that wouldn't be duplicated by atmospheric changes.

    However, if it acted as a detergent and helped get rid of small deposits in the injectors that create turbulence in the airflow and increase the likelihood of droplets forming- that seems to me a better explanation of the effect.
     

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