With so many people monkeying around with explosive gas generators, fuel ionizing magnets, and electronic ECU interceptors, I thought it's time for a reality check.
THERE ARE NO MIRACULOUS MILEAGE EXTENDERS THAT THE GOVERNMENT AND THE CAR COMPANIES DON'T WANT YOU TO KNOW ABOUT.
If you still like to to believe conspiracy-theory fairy tales like that, then it's time for a little growing up. Yeah, that is a blunt and off-putting statement, but I think it has to be said. Here's a lesson from real life - five people cannot agree on where to go to lunch, never mind agreeing on how and why to control the world or assassinate JFK.
If it's too good to be true, it isn't.
If it defies the laws of physics, it doesn't.
If you get excited by a sales pitch or the promise no one else can make, you have fallen for a sales pitch for a bogus product.
If one of these miracles in a little black box actually worked, then every auto manufacturer would have developed their own version of the system by now and installed it across the model line (or at least offer it as an option). And I'm not talking about one of these McGyver'ed messes being debated in that other thread on this board. I mean a works-in-the-real-world, fully-developed, warrantied-to-100k-miles engine component like all the other real mileage-improving or performance-enhancing mechanisms available today, like hybrid power-trains, variable valve timing, and direct-injection engines.
If you want to play with explosives under your hood, go for it. But I don't particularly want to see this board cluttered up with an endless recitation of the miraculous claims of others while you "develop" your system and jabber about the technical issues of why it hasn't yet reached it's full potential for extending mileage 20% to 40% - when what you mean is it doesn't work. If you think it really does, then spend some time trying playing devil's advocate and see if you can't figure out why it seems to work but really doesn't.
Man, I'm turning into a crotchety old fart waaaay before my time!