Fuel saving device
Fuel saving devices are sold on the aftermarket with claims to improve the fuel economy and/or the exhaust emissions of a vehicle. There are numerous different types of device; many purport to optimize ignition, air flow, or fuel flow in some way. An early example of such a device sold with difficult-to-justify claims is the 200 mpg carburetor designed by Canadian inventor Charles Nelson Pogue.
The US EPA is required by Section 511 of the Motor Vehicle Information and Cost Savings Act to test many of these devices and to provide public reports on their efficacy; the agency finds most devices do not improve fuel economy to any measurable degree.[1] Tests by Popular Mechanics magazine also found these types of devices yield no measurable improvements in fuel consumption or power, and in some cases actually decrease both power and fuel economy.[2]
Other organizations generally considered reputable, such as the American Automobile Association and Consumer Reports have performed studies with the same result.[3][4]
One reason that ineffective fuel saving gadgets are popular is the difficulty of accurately measuring small changes in the fuel economy of a vehicle. This is because of the high level of variance in the fuel consumption of a vehicle under normal driving conditions. Due to selective perception and confirmation bias, the buyer of a device can perceive an improvement where none actually exists. For this reason, regulatory bodies have developed standardized drive cycles for consistent, accurate testing of vehicle fuel consumption.[5] Where fuel economy does improve after the fitment of a device, it is usually due to the tune-up procedure that is conducted as part of the installation.[6] In older systems with distributor ignitions, device manufacturers would specify timing advance beyond that recommended by the manufacturer, which by itself could boost fuel economy while potentially increasing emissions of some combustion products, at the risk of possible engine damage.[5]
Types of devices
Accessory drive modifications
Modifying the accessory drive system can increase fuel economy and performance to some extent.[7] Underdrive pulleys modify the amount of engine power that can be drawn by accessory devices. Such alterations to the drive systems for alternators or air conditioning compressors (rather than the power steering pump, for example) can be detrimental to vehicle usability, but will not impair safety.[8]
Fuel & oil additives
Compounds sold for addition to the vehicle's fuel may include tin, magnesium and platinum. The claimed purpose of these is generally to improve the energy density of the fuel. Additives for addition to the engine oil, sometimes marketed as "engine treatments", contain teflon, zinc, or chlorine compounds; none of these is appropriate or helpful when added to an engine's crankcase, and they can in fact damage the engine.[9] The US Federal Trade Commission has aggressively pursued marketers of oil additives falsely claimed to improve fuel economy.[10][11][12][13][14][15]
Magnets
Magnets attached to a vehicle's fuel line have been claimed to improve fuel economy by aligning fuel molecules, but because motor fuels are non-polar, no such alignment or other magnetic effect on the fuel is possible. When tested, typical magnet devices had no effect on vehicle performance or economy.[2]
Vapor devices
Some devices claim to improve efficiency by changing the way that liquid fuel is converted to vapor. These include fuel heaters and devices to increase or decrease turbulence in the intake manifold. These do not work because the principle is already applied to the design of the engine, and because intake tract flow dynamics are highly specific to each engine design, no universal device could have any given effect on more than one kind of engine.[16]
Electronic devices
Some electronic devices are marketed as fuel savers. The Fuel Doctor FD-47, for example, plugs into the vehicle's cigarette lighter and displays several LEDs. It is claimed to increase vehicle fuel economy by up to 25% through "power conditioning of the vehicle's electrical systems",[17] but Consumer Reports detected no difference in economy or power in tests on ten separate vehicles, finding that the device did nothing but light up.[18] Car and Driver magazine found that the device contains nothing but "a simple circuit board for the LED lights",[19] and disassembly and circuit analysis reaches the same conclusion.[20] The maker disputed claims that the device has no effect,[21] and proposed changes to the Consumer Reports testing procedure, which when implemented made no difference to the results.[22]
Another device described as 'electronic' is the 'Electronic Engine Ionizer Fuel Saver'. Testing of this device resulted in a loss of power and an engine compartment fire.[2]
There are also genuinely useful 'emissions-control defeat devices' that operate by allowing a vehicle's engine to operate outside government-imposed tailpipe emissions parameters. These government standards force factory engines to operate outside their most efficient range of operation. Either engine control units are reprogrammed to operate more efficiently,[23] or sensors that influence the ECU's operation are modified or 'simulated' to cause it to operate in a more efficient manner. Oxygen sensor simulators allow fuel-economy reducing catalytic converters to be removed.[24] Such devices are often sold for "off-road use only".[24]
Thermodynamic efficiency
The reason why most devices are not capable of producing the claimed improvements is based in thermodynamics. This formula expresses the theoretical efficiency of an engine:[25]
where h is efficiency, rv is the compression ratio, and g is the ratio of the specific heats of the gases before and after combustion.
Assuming an ideal engine with no friction, perfect insulation, perfect combustion, a compression ratio of 10:1, and a g of 1.27 (for gasoline-air combustion), the theoretical efficiency of the engine would be 46%.
For example, if an automobile typically gets 20 miles per gallon with a 20% efficient engine that has a 10:1 compression ratio, a carburetor claiming 100MPG would have to increase the efficiency by a factor of 5, to 100%. This is clearly beyond what is theoretically or practically possible. A similar claim of 300MPG for any vehicle would require an engine (in this particular case) that is 300% efficient, which violates the First Law of Thermodynamics.
Extremely efficient vehicle designs capable of achieving 100MPG+ (such as the VW 1l) do not have substantially greater engine efficiency, but instead focus on better aerodynamics, reduced vehicle weight, and using energy that would otherwise be dissipated as heat during braking.
Urban legend
There is a debunked[26] urban legend about an inventor who creates a 100 mpg (2.35 L/100 km) or even 200 mpg carburetor, but after demonstrating it for the major vehicle manufacturers, the inventor mysteriously disappears. In some versions of the story, he is claimed to have been killed by the government. This fiction is thought to have started after Canadian Charles Nelson Pogue filed in 1930 for such a device,[27] followed by others.[28][29]
MythBusters
The popular U.S. television show MythBusters investigated several fuel-saving devices using gasoline- and diesel-powered fuel-injected cars under controlled circumstances.[30] Fuel line magnets, which supposedly align the fuel molecules so they burn better, were tested and found to make no difference in fuel consumption. The debunked[31] notion that adding acetone to gasoline improves efficiency by making the gasoline burn more completely without damaging the plastic parts of the fuel system was tested, and although there was no apparent damage the fuel system, the vehicle's fuel economy was actually worsened.
The show tested the hypothesis that a car with a carburetor type gasoline engine can run on hydrogen gas alone, which was confirmed as viable, although the high cost of hydrogen gas as well as storage difficulties currently prohibit widespread adoption. They also tested a device that supposedly produces sufficient hydrogen to power a car by electrolysis (running an electric current through water to split its molecules into hydrogen and oxygen). Although some hydrogen was produced, the amount was minuscule compared to the quantity necessary to run a car for even a few seconds.
The show also tested a carburetor that, according to its manufacturer, could improve fuel efficiency to 300 miles per gallon. However, the device actually made the car less fuel efficient. They also determined that a diesel-powered car can run on used cooking oil though they did not check whether it damaged the engine.
The show noted that out of 104 fuel efficiency devices tested by the EPA, only seven showed any improvement in efficiency, and even then, the improvement was never more than six percent. The show also noted that if any of the devices they tested actually worked to the extent they were supposed to, the episode would have been one of the most legendary hours of television.
See also
- Telematics
- History of perpetual motion machines
- Corporate Average Fuel Economy
- Emission standard
- Magnetic water treatment
References
- ↑ EPA Gas Saving and Emission Reduction Devices Evaluation
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Mike Allen, "Looking For A Miracle: We Test Automotive 'Fuel Savers'", Popular Mechanics
- ↑ "Things that Don't Work: A Look at Gas-Saving Gadgets" (PDF). AAA AUTOgram (30). May–June 1999. Retrieved 2011-05-22.
- ↑ "Gas-saving devices tested". Consumer Reports (30). July 2010. Retrieved 2011-05-22.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Jim Dunne (August 1974), "Those "gas-saving" gadgets... do they or don't they?", Popular Science: 67–68
- ↑ "At last- EPA tests reveal the truth about those gas-saving devices", Popular Science, March 1980: 117–119, 182
- ↑ Better Business Bureau list of ineffective retrofit devices and glossary of terms
- ↑ "Dozen Tech Tips". AutoSpeed. Retrieved 2013-12-30.
- ↑ Ball, Larry. "Oil Additives: Do They Work?". TwinCessna.org. Retrieved 2011-05-22.
- ↑ FTC lawsuit: ZMax oil additive
- ↑ FTC lawsuit: DuraLube oil additives
- ↑ FTC lawsuit: STP engine treatment
- ↑ FTC lawsuit: Slick-50 engine treatment
- ↑ FTC lawsuit: ProLong engine treatment
- ↑ FTC lawsuit: MotorUP oil additive
- ↑ http://www.fuelsaving.info/turbulence.htm
- ↑ "Fuel Doctor USA's FD-47 Available Now at Best Buy". Reuters. 2010-03-30.
- ↑ "Fuel Doctor FD-47 fails the Consumer Reports mpg test". News.consumerreports.org. 2010-12-07. Retrieved 2013-12-30.
- ↑ MICHAEL AUSTIN (May 2011). "Fuel-Saving Devices Debunked: Dynamic Ionizer, Fuel Doctor FD-47, Hot InaZma Eco, Moletech Fuel Saver, Fuel Boss Magnetic Fuel Saver - Gearbox". Car and Driver. Retrieved 2013-12-30.
- ↑ How the Fuel Doctor Works
- ↑ "Fuel Doctor Challenges Consumer Reports" (Press release). Fuel Doctor USA. 10 December 2010.
- ↑ "New Fuel Doctor tests: Still no MPG magic". Consumer Reports. 26 May 2011.
- ↑
- ↑ 24.0 24.1 "Federal Settlement Targets Illegal Emission Control 'Defeat Devices' Sold for Autos". Prnewswire.com. July 10, 2007. Retrieved 2013-12-30.
- ↑ "Improving IC Engine Efficiency". University of Washington. Retrieved June 4, 2008.
- ↑ Snopes.com: Nobody's Fuel
- ↑ U.S. Patent 1,750,354
- ↑ U.S. Patent 1,938,497
- ↑ U.S. Patent 1,997,497
- ↑ "Episode 53: Exploding Trousers, Great Gas Conspiracy". Unofficial MythBusters: Episode guides. 2006-05-28.
- ↑ Snopes.com: Acetone Deaf
External links
- "Fuel saving - a professional engineer's view". fuelsaving.info. December 10, 2005. Archived from the original on December 10, 2005. Retrieved May 12, 2014. including a case study on "Case Study: Vaporate (TM)*". fuelsaving.info. February 5, 2006. Archived from the original on February 5, 2006. Retrieved May 12, 2014.
- FCIC warning on fuel saving devices