dburt
Member
- 329
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- 18
- Location
- NE Oregon & SW Idaho
During the early '70's I was in Milwaukee for a summer's work, and had an older friend who was a German mechanic. He had a carb he had built for his '66 Ford Ranchero 6-cylinder shop truck. It was crude, it heated the fuel before it went raw into the intake, so it was delivering vapors instead of raw fuel. He got about 40mpg with it on, about 20mpg with the stock carb. He took it off and was in the process of building himself a refined version of it, he offered it to me, but since I drove a VW bug, I passed. He heated the fuel via an 12v electric heater until the engine got up to operating temp, and then used engine coolant to heat the chamber. He said he had to work out the things like a choke, and mixture control circuits for better power at speed vs idle. etc. Crude, but it worked. In the early 80's I taught high school shop classes in NE Oregon. We had a teacher inservice day at another larger, nearby high school, so I went and hung out in the auto shop. The teacher there had a special carb he had built and installed on a Chev 350 in the shop that was on a teaching stand, it had fuel tank, radiator, battery, etc. He could start the engine and run it, it was a test mule for students to work on and then test thier work by starting the engine, tuning it, etc. A buddy of mine taught the machine shop classes at the same school, and he had helped the auto shop teacher by machining parts for his special carb, so it was pretty refined and well sorted out. The auto shop teacher had installed it on his own car and tested it quite a bit, he reported he got about 45mpg as compared to about 20mpg on the stock carb on the 350 in his car.
I saw the engine, heard it run, it also had a reservoir around the top that held water to heat the gas by a 12v heater coil in the water which vaporized the fuel instead of dumping raw fuel into the intake. He had refined the idle circuit and the power circuit pretty well. He thought he would patent the carb, poor ignorant fellow. So he sends off a letter with drawings etc to GMC thinking they would love to get involved with this great idea of his. Within a week he got certified letters back from lawyers representing Chevron telling him that they held the patents to such designs, and that he was not to build, market, or promote any such carb. In fact he was to destroy his working model. He could bring himself to do that, so he just put it back on the test stand engine. No urban myth here, saw the carb, saw the letters, etc. He was pretty dejected, but alot wiser. He ended up putting the carb on his own car and leaving it there. Now- back to Acetone in diesel, it will be interesting to see what happens to anyone else who tries this, I will be eager to see your results.
I saw the engine, heard it run, it also had a reservoir around the top that held water to heat the gas by a 12v heater coil in the water which vaporized the fuel instead of dumping raw fuel into the intake. He had refined the idle circuit and the power circuit pretty well. He thought he would patent the carb, poor ignorant fellow. So he sends off a letter with drawings etc to GMC thinking they would love to get involved with this great idea of his. Within a week he got certified letters back from lawyers representing Chevron telling him that they held the patents to such designs, and that he was not to build, market, or promote any such carb. In fact he was to destroy his working model. He could bring himself to do that, so he just put it back on the test stand engine. No urban myth here, saw the carb, saw the letters, etc. He was pretty dejected, but alot wiser. He ended up putting the carb on his own car and leaving it there. Now- back to Acetone in diesel, it will be interesting to see what happens to anyone else who tries this, I will be eager to see your results.