3 Gas Saving Tips that DON’T Work
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Some tips belong on the door of your fridge for everyone in the household to see and take note of; however, some other tips belong to the trash bin. There are tons of gas saving tips which you might have heard of thanks to activists lobbying against rising gas prices and crusaders for the protection of our environment; unfortunately, these “gas saving tips” do more harm than good. Aside losing you more money to products that don’t work, they could also endanger your life on the road.
Here are 2 widely-advertised products online people have been buying and 1 dangerous gas-saving tip fuel-saving enthusiasts have been campaigning for.
1. Water4Gas
CLAIM:
Can turn your car into a hybrid– overnight! Just connect a few hoses and fill a few cans with hydrogen, and your car will run on water. It’s that easy!
Obviously, the entire process is a complete sham. Scientists from the University of California, Berkeley, University of Washington College of Engineering, and from other universities have debunked all claims coming from the website. Anyone attempting to duplicate the same
process of nitrogen-fission which the website claims you can do provided you read their manuals and buy their Water4Gas kit will not succeed at it because it simply takes more than that to turn plain water to fuel.
2. The Motoflow Fuel Magnet
CLAIM:
Aligns gas molecules so your engine burns less fuel and emits less petrol.
If you believe in this claim, there’s a nice beach front property in Kansas I’d like to sell to you. What you see below is a piece of magnet encased in a piece of plastic impaled by a tube of rubber. If you want to get into specifics, there is no science behind the “alignment of gas molecules” and FTC themselves have investigated the matter and have this to say.
You don’t need to buy fancy gadgets to save fuel. Simply install a new fuel system locking cap every 10-12 months can keep your fuel system from leaks.
3. Hypermiling
How far would you go to save a few dollars? To save gas, people are actually considering death-defying methods, like tailgating behind a large truck at high speeds and turning their engines off while going downhill thereby forcing their cars to coast a little before stopping.
Aside from movie stuntmen, people who engage in these practices are called “hypermilers”. Hypermilers are very serious about saving fuel, but the thought of tailgating behind a vehicle larger than theirs at high-way speeds is more than dangerous. Due to the risks hypermiling poses, laws have been passed to stop it.
Is it logical to risk hundreds of dollars in hospitalization costs and even your life in order to save pennies for gas consumption? From a careful driver’s standpoint, it clearly isn’t!






