Guest Simon* Report post Posted April 20, 2010 From the Herald Fuelstar Fuel Combustion Technology of Auckland is set to become a multimillion-dollar exporter. The company, which has been battling sceptics for years, has recently made a major breakthrough with its fuel combustion catalyst that will reap huge rewards for the operators of high-use diesel engines. "Any product which can reliably achieve reductions in fuel consumption by 15 per cent and more must attract the attention of operators of ships, locomotives, gensets and trucks," said Fuelstar boss Ian Cornelius. "Until recently we had been relying upon the natural harmonics of a moving vehicle. With cars this worked satisfactorily, but with larger engines such as those used in trucks and, in particular, stationary engines in power generation plants, we were not seeing results on a reliable basis. "However, all of that is now in the past. During the past few months, Fuelstar has developed a vibratory mechanism thus taking control of this all-important function. We can now reliably control the rate of release of metallic particles into the fuel stream. "The result is that we can achieve an improvement in engine efficiency (specific fuel consumption) by 15 per cent and more on each and every occasion." Fuelstar has been around since 1992 helping car, van, truck and motorcycle owners save fuel. The product is a fit and forget fuel combustion catalyst that provides greater overall engine efficiency by giving a better and more complete combustion. The benefits are improved performance, better fuel economy, a cleaner engine and lower exhaust emissions. The unit is about the size of a soft drink can (car engine model) and is plumbed into the fuel supply line and attached to the engine, or inside the engine bay. Fuel flows through the unit, on its way to the carburettor or injection system. As the fuel passes through the canister, minuscule particles of metallic tin (in powder form) are released into the fuel supply and are carried through to the combustion chambers, where they act as a catalyst in the combustion process. These particles are of sub-micron dimension, 100 nanometres and less (the width of a human hair is 88,000 nanometres) and are far too small to damage engine components. The tin changes the combustion characteristics of the fuel, giving a more complete and more prolonged fuel burn. This results in improved engine efficiency and performance. "We can make the product available at a price where the expected benefits recover the cost 20 to 30 times over, payback is less than three months compared with a life of five to eight years and the break-even point is a reduction in fuel consumption of 0.5 per cent and less," said Cornelius. With reduced fuel consumption comes reduced emissions. With carbon dioxide emissions at 2.6kg per litre of fuel burned, this means Fuelstar has the potential to reduce the emission of carbon dioxide by several millions of tonnes per annum. A line haul truck travelling 250,000km a year would use about 125,000 litres of fuel depending on driving conditions. A reduction of 15 per cent would save the operator 18,750 litres (worth $25,000 at current prices) and reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 50 tonnes a year. The company is in discussion with its financial backers to raise enough capital to complete comprehensive third party verification testing. The company is also in discussion with leading engine manufacturers around the world for its technology to be adopted for use in new engines. While waiting for further tests to be carried out, a Fuelstar was installed in a 6.9 litre diesel Nissan truck by California Environmental Engineering (CEE) in 2002. The test revealed reductions in fuel consumption by 27 per cent, CO2 by 30 per cent and particulate matter by 24 per cent. "The figures are certainly significant and if anything, as the report states, they are conservative," said Cornelius. Fuelstar has been successfully tested by many other governmental and non-governmental agencies. It is being used increasingly by commercial fleets and is of interest to various engine manufacturers. The unit meets the various compliance and practice requirements relating to modification to vehicles and contains no toxic substances. In many countries, the supply of leaded petrol has been, or is being, terminated. Fuelstar enables engines designed for leaded petrol to operate on unleaded petrol without loss of performance, pinging and detonation and without valve seat recession. The particles of metallic tin are oxidised during the combustion process and are thought to form a refractory coating on the valve mating surfaces. This acts as a flux, interrupting the fusion process, or microscopic welding, the cause of valve seat recession. Not only have haulage companies and the like noticed gains in fuel economy, the ordinary motorist has been impressed also. "I purchased my first unit, in April 2006 and installed it in my 1998 Ford Mondeo Diesel," said Terry Brown. "This vehicle is fairly economical anyway with a range of almost 800km per tank of fuel. To my surprise, the engine now runs better and the range of the tank has been extended to beyond 1000km. "To confirm the result, I then purchased a second unit, and installed it in my 1991 Toyota Camry. The fuel consumption is normally 8.65 litres/100km but improved after three weeks' running to 6.37 litres/100km. "One observation which amazed me was that the turbo, which had not operated for the last 100,000km resumed operating after just 10km of running with the Fuelstar. I spoke to Graham Savage, the senior lecturer in mechanical engineering at Waiariki Institute of Technology about this who said that tin is a known lubricant and it obviously freed up the turbo waste gate." The unit achieves these benefits in both petrol, diesel and LPG engines of all sizes ranging from motor scooters and motorcycles, through to cars, 4WD's, buses, trucks, off-road equipment, boats and ships. There is a money-back guarantee that the product will save fuel by at least 10 per cent or increase power output by at least 5 per cent in all engines. Guaranteed life of product is five years or 500,000km (12,000 hours) whichever comes last. Fuelstar can be installed by any competent mechanic in less than one hour. For more information contact Ian Cornelius on 0800 383 578 or visit the website www.fuelstar.co.nz Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CamB 48 Report post Posted April 20, 2010 (edited) I am an unbeliever - it sounds like homeopathy. That is all. Edited April 20, 2010 by CamB Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Mark 178 Report post Posted April 20, 2010 The Herald printed this? This is just a word for word press release from the company! f**king lazy journalists. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Simon* Report post Posted April 20, 2010 Haha I wish I'd put money on the pair of you commenting as such Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Ari Gold Report post Posted April 20, 2010 People who quote the herald need to be put down. I nearly fell off my chair when they claimed a turbo started working again. "One observation which amazed me was that the turbo, which had not operated for the last 100,000km resumed operating after just 10km of running with the Fuelstar. I spoke to Graham Savage, the senior lecturer in mechanical engineering at Waiariki Institute of Technology about this who said that tin is a known lubricant and it obviously freed up the turbo waste gate." If this is indeed the case, the Tin is clearly going unburnt all the way though the engine. So not only is it supplying too much Tin, it's potentially doing damage to the catalytic converters in the exhausts. Double score! No links on the Waiariki website mention Graham Savage being senior lecturer, but it DOES mention he judged the wearable art. Sounds like a pretty credible source. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Simon* Report post Posted April 20, 2010 People who quote the herald need to be put down. The Devil made me do it! Hahahaahahahaaaaa Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CamB 48 Report post Posted April 20, 2010 Hadn't thought about the "tin going through the engine". Had wondered when I read it what kind of muppet drives 100,000km without checking to see if his wastegate can be fixed*. * a further thought - does a wastegate stick closed or open if its seized? Closed!?!? WTF - overboost. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bravo 35 Report post Posted April 21, 2010 The guy's name is Cornelius? That's all I need to know. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
antil33t 90 Report post Posted April 21, 2010 I smell bullshit. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
pjay 8 Report post Posted April 21, 2010 Fuelstar saved my marriage and supported my crack addiction. I can now drift more gangster and will go to heaven, all thanks to fuelstar. Sounds like a South Park episode. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
elmarco 56 Report post Posted April 21, 2010 I could be swayed to believe the theory that tin acts as a catalyst for combustion, but will reserve full judgement until I see full test results from a certified ECE/ADR/SAE/EPA combined cycle fuel consumption test on the same car before and after (not the same model car - the same car). My guess is that this kind of hard evidence that supports their claims is going to be very hard to come by. I'd also be a little concerned about catalytic converters, injectors, oxygen sensors etc... Car companies invest billions in research every year - if these things actually worked they would be standard equipment like seat belts or fuel injection. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
crshbndct 0 Report post Posted June 29, 2010 yeah. all the trillions of dollars of vehicle research that every ca manufacturer has been doing since the 1800's has been triumphed by some guy with a tin can full of tin. between this, my hho system, and my prius, i am actually watching my gas gauge move up!! i have to siphon the tank every 100km. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
_ethrty-Andy_ 2132 Report post Posted June 29, 2010 between this, my hho system, and my prius, i am actually watching my gas gauge move up!! i have to siphon the tank every 100km. Best post ive read on this foum in months rofl! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ducatiss 1 Report post Posted July 7, 2010 But ya know - in spite of the product probably being crap, they will sell in their millions eh. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
dirtydoogle 383 Report post Posted July 8, 2010 Sounds a bit like "you will be far better off after the tax cuts" to me. Or "Helen IS a woman". Load of tripe, like the cute little intake fan thingymajigs the Integra drivers buy to make thier VTEC go hard ow. I should put a fuel star on the Rover and see if I can get better than it's 16L/100km....... Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites