Posts Tagged ‘save energy’

Jul
2010
1

27 Tips to Stay Cooler and Save Money Without Breaking The Bank

Posted by: hhotek No Comments

I live in North Carolina where we frequently see 95 degree days and 60% or 70% humidity, its HOT to say the very least.  Staying cool during these hot times of the year is usually quite expensive, well here are some ways you can continue to stay cool and save a few bucks while doing it.  Most of these tips require little if any cost to implement.

First and foremost our ES 1200 Power Conditioner will make your AC much more efficient and reduce the amount of energy it uses each time it fires up.  In hot climates like i am in it will pay for itself in a very short period of time. http://hhotek.com/homeproducts/current.html.

Now for the Free Tips

• Open windows and use portable or ceiling fans instead of operating your air conditioner. Even mild air movement of 1 mph can make you feel three or four degrees cooler. Make sure your ceiling fan is turned for summer — you should feel the air blown downward. If you live in a relatively dry climate, a bowl or tray of ice in front of a box fan can cool you as it evaporates.

• Use a fan with your window air conditioner to spread the cool air through your home.

• Without blocking air flow, shade your outside compressor. Change air filters monthly during the summer.

• Use a programmable thermostat with your air conditioner to adjust the setting at night or when no one is home.

• Don’t place lamps or TVs near your air conditioning thermostat. The heat from these appliances will cause the air conditioner to run longer.

• Install white window shades, drapes, or blinds to reflect heat away from the house. Close curtains on south- and west-facing windows during the day.

• Install awnings on south-facing windows. Because of the angle of the sun, trees, a trellis, or a fence will best shade west-facing windows. Apply sun-control or other reflective films on south-facing windows.

• Plant trees or shrubs to shade air conditioning units, but not block the airflow. A unit operating in the shade uses less electricity.

• Grown on trellises, vines such as ivy or grapevines can shade windows or the whole side of a house.

• Avoid landscaping with lots of unshaded rock, cement, or asphalt on the south or west sides. It increases the temperature around the house and radiates heat to the house after the sun has set.

• Deciduous trees planted on the south and west sides will keep your house cool in the summer. Just three trees, properly placed around a house, can save a few hundred dollars in annual cooling and heating costs. In summer, daytime air temperatures can be 3 degrees to 6 degrees cooler in tree-shaded neighborhoods.

• Replace incandescent bulbs with compact fluorescents or LED; they produce the same light but use substantially less energy and produce less heat. • Air-dry dishes instead of using your dishwasher’s drying cycle as the dry cycle creates heat.

• Turn off your computer and monitor when not in use.

• Plug home electronics, such as TVs and VCRs, into power strips, and turn power strips off when equipment is not in use.

• Lower the thermostat on your water heater; 115° is comfortable for most uses.

• Take showers instead of baths to reduce hot water use.

• Wash only full loads of dishes and clothes.

• Caulking and weather stripping will keep cool air inside during the summer.

• If you see holes or separated joints in your ducts, hire a professional to repair them.

• Add insulation around air conditioning ducts when they are located in unconditioned spaces such as attics, crawl spaces, and garages; do the same for whole-house fans where they open to the exterior or to the attic.

• Check to see that your fireplace damper is tightly closed.

• You can help get rid of unwanted heat through ventilation if the temperature of the incoming air is 77 F or lower. (This strategy works most effectively at night and on cooler days.) Window fans for ventilation are a good option if used properly. They should be located on the downwind side of the house facing out. A window should be open in each room. Interior doors must remain open to allow air flow.

• Use ceiling fans to increase comfort levels at higher thermostat settings. The standard human comfort range for light clothing in the summer is between 72 F and 78 F. To extend the comfort range to 82 F, you need a breeze of about 2.5 ft/sec or 1.7 mph. A slow-turning ceiling-mounted paddle fan can easily provide this air flow.

• Try not to use a dehumidifier at the same time your air conditioner is operating. The dehumidifier will increase the cooling load and force the air conditioner to work harder.

• Don’t air-condition unused rooms.

• Clean your A/C’s air filter every month during cooling season. Normal dust build-up can reduce air flow by 1 percent per week.

Here are a couple other articles that have some additional tips and information to reduce energy costs.

http://hhotek.com/blog/green-tips/green-tips-light-home-staying-cool-summer/

http://hhotek.com/blog/green-tips/energy-saving-tips/

By:Trevor Hunter

Posted in: Green Tips
Jun
2010
4

12 Liter diesel truck in London saving $36 per day!

Posted by: hhotek No Comments

I just received the following  email from my UK Division, “That 12 liter Daf Truck i fitted started working immediately and save around £50 in fuel in the first TWO DAYS .  This was fitted with the new 24vF AFU that i will be sending over shortly, THESE WORK !!.  We are going to have the truck driver to drive around 200 miles then review it again.” -Paul Chandler HHO Tek UK Division

This is always great news that an independent company decides to try the product out to make up there on mind if it works or not.  All of us here at HHO Tek know the outcome, because it works, not sometimes, not most of the time, it works ALWAYS!  All the documentation and magazine articles in the world can’t prove it to someone the way them seeing it for themselves can.

12 liter

Apr
2010
23

HHO Tek Ford Focus Exceeds EPA Fuel Mileage Test

Posted by: hhotek No Comments

HHO Tek is focusing on real world driving conditions in the Ford Focus to demonstrate that the Platinum Fuel Saver does what Federal Judge Walter J Skinner found to be true: “The Platinum Fuel saver device is an effective fuel saving device and purchasers will in fact be receiving what they bargained for.” — Walter J. Skinner

This Ford Focus was purchased new in 2004 and from day one, with new, properly inflated tires, and in perfect tune has never gotten over 19 mpg in city, in fact the average is 17.8 with the best being 19 mpg city and 27 mpg hwy. The EPA tests show that the Focus should get 31 MPG on the highway and 24-27 in the city. Why are the EPA results and the real world results so different? Below is a description of how they administer the test straight off the EPA website.

EPA testing procedure through 2007
Two separate fuel economy tests on a vehicle in perfect tuned condition and using a low electrical load are administered to simulate city driving and highway driving: the city driving program consists of starting with a cold engine and making 23 stops over a period of 31 minutes for an average speed of 20 mph (32 km/h) and with a top speed of 56 mph (90 km/h); the highway program uses a warmed-up engine and makes no stops, averaging 48 mph (77 km/h) with a top speed of 60 mph (97 km/h) over a 10 mile (16 km) distance.

After 5 years and some 66000 miles on the Focus, The Platinum Fuel Saver was installed, a couple of weeks later the fuel mileage had increased to 23.6 in town and 28.4 on the highway this is far from scientific, but real world in practicality which showed that the Platinum Fuel Saver did in fact work, it was using less fuel for the miles it was driven.

Trevor Hunter, Ceo of HHO Tek and Don Conner, Industrial Sales Director did a regional tour assisting existing dealers and setting up new dealers in the Southeast and Midwest, ending up in Levelland, TX.

Trevor needed to be back in Rutherfordton North Carolina and decided to load up the Focus with the tour gear and Don Conner, (nearly 800 lbs of passengers and gear) to do a real world driving test from Levelland to Rutherfordton, NC, a distance of about 1300 miles.

During the test they were not doing the EPA average speed of 48 mph, instead they were steady at 70-80 mph, over a 17.7 hour time period they actually averaged 57.3 mph (the fuel receipts on the website do verify this) that is including the 4 fuel stops, bathroom breaks, and a stop a casino for about 30 minutes in Louisiana. The AC was running nearly the whole time as well as a 750 watt power invertor to power the laptops. So there was an above average electrical load as well.

The fuel receipts from the trip have been scanned and uploaded to the website; there were also photos taken of the instrument cluster to show the mileage corresponding with the fuel receipts. HHO Tek encounters a lot of skepticism with this product so they wanted to make the results as transparent as possible, anyone can go to the website and look at the data they have provided and cross calculate any way you choose and end up with the same results which are, that the HHO Tek Ford Focus is getting an average of 31.9 MPG with the Platinum Fuel Saver, which is better than the EPA tests say this car should get and the Ford Focus test was conducted in beyond real world conditions. The bottom line is once again they have validated the Platinum Fuel Saver does what HHO Tek says it does and has been doing for more than 33 years now.

To see the HHO Tek Ford Focus complete test results please visit www.hhotek.com/focus.php

Posted in: Green News
Feb
2010
20

HHO Tek to Clean up California’s Gross Polluters

Posted by: hhotek No Comments

February 18, 2010 — HHO Tek just announced that they have begun official testing of an early 80’s model Jeep which is currently classified as a gross polluter. They have installed one of their Platinum Fuel Savers on the Jeep and the owner will drive it for one thousand miles in order to allow their product to fully condition the engine. Once the thousand miles are done, they will test the truck again at a Gold Shield California testing station and get conclusive results that the Platinum Fuel Saver will make a vehicle classified as a gross polluter pass and quite possibly exceed minimum standards.  The owner of the Jeep is an off road enthusiast and one club he is a member of, requires California minimum standards be met, so until it is approved he cannot take this Jeep to their off road parks.

The Platinum Fuel Saver has been on the market for over 30 years but due to ineffective marketing exposure over the years, many people have never heard of it.  HHO Tek took the product on about a year ago breathing new life into it with an effective global marketing campaign which has taken this product to an entirely new level.  HHO Tek says that even though product support is growing rapidly in the US, over 80% of their business is international.

If you live in the State of California and your vehicle has been designated a “Gross Polluter” this can have a variety of consequences for you depending on what you depend on that vehicle to do for you. If it is strictly for recreation then it must be hauled to the point of use and back home. It is then an inconvenience. If it is your daily driver and you cannot afford a replacement. The consequences are infinitely worse. If it is in good tune, decent mechanical condition and just won’t pass the emissions test, we believe we can come to your rescue, in passing the emissions test, while giving you a guaranteed twenty two percent increase in mileage.
Is it likely something as simple as a $239 product which installs in minutes could solve the problem? According to HHO Tek, that is precisely what this testing procedure is going to prove. They also said that if for some reason it doesn’t make the car pass emissions testing and customer is not happy with a 22% increase in their fuel mileage, they will issue them a full refund.
HHOTek informed that they also have a new product which is going to completely change the way you look at an oil change, but that is all they would tell me for now.
Keep an eye out for this young company they are really making waves in the Go Green industry.
While researching gross polluters I ran across this article which tells the story of an individual from Vermont whose vehicle gets classified as a “gross polluter”. It is an amusing read which illustrates the problem quite well.

Confessions of a Gross Polluter
It was like learning I had bad breath. I had expected that registering my car in California would take about an hour. Wrong. It took about that much time to fill out the paperwork, write a check, take a number, and wait in line in the Division of Motor Vehicles.
I wasn’t in Vermont any longer, where the mountains are green and the cars are free to be you-and-polluting-me. Alas, I get ahead of myself and ahead of my 1999 Toyota Rav4’s collision with the “smog” test.
A friendly Department of Motor Vehicles employee suggested that I drive down the street to a certified shop. The serviceman greeted me and took my car into his garage.
After a half hour he came out of the bay, looked gravely at me, and said, “This is bad, very, very bad. You are a gross polluter.”
Like an owner pointing a puppy’s nose into an accident on the living room rug, he waived the detailed report in front of me, with those dreaded words in all caps. GROSS POLLUTER.
“You need to take care of this immediately. It may not be fixable,” he said sternly.
This being California, I expected that the mechanic would have asked how I felt about it, but no, he was perfunctory and sent me away, after charging me $70.
My hopes of living a carbon-neutral life were dashed. Forget my conversation driving across North Dakota when I suggested to my partner that we avoid purchasing bottled water in favor of filtering our own from the tap. Forget my plans for aggressive recycling and erase my years of composting… I’m a carbon-monoxide-spewing machine; I visualized the trail of grimy haze I left across the country, as I drove from Vermont to California.
I imagined what my former colleagues at Vermont Law School, a leading environmental law school, would think. Did they notice when I parked next to them in the parking lot weeks earlier? Would they cluck over a cup of shared green tea, “Yes, she was a gross polluter waiting to happen. It was only a matter of time.”
Seeking sympathy, I called my mother. She pointed out, “Wow, Vermont must have been really happy to see you go.” No purchase there.
I drove and saw a dented van from the 1970s emitting gray plumes of smoke with current registration tags. I wondered, how could this car have passed an emission test, when mine did not?
Then I learned about the loopholes. My California friends filled me in. One, tired of paying reams of exhaust repair bills, purchased an older-model VW Bus, filled with memories of the early 1970s and a favored polluter status-consider it a grandfather clause for grime. He eventually drove his toxic machine back to the east coast, where no DMV seems to notice.
I set out to find a mechanic to bring me back into the environmental fold. During a phone conversation, she said, “I’m not sure I can help you out. These things can be tricky.”
Two trips to the shop later, with new oxygen sensors and a catalytic converter, the old girl passed her “smog test.” I asked for a hard copy of the results to bring back to the DMV. She said, “Oh, they’ve already been forwarded by computer.”
Yikes! I’m in a database. DMV in California monitors its “GROSS POLLUTERS,” a black list for non-green Californians. I imagined the Division of Natural Resources arresting me as I walked out of Whole Foods with a bag of organic produce and hauling me away in a Prius with “Environmental Police” emblazoned on the side. Now I proudly held my new plates and thought, I will have CA plates on the back and front of my car. The air is cleaner and my wallet is $1,000 lighter.

Posted in: Green News
Feb
2010
20

JP Magazine approves the Platinum Fuel Saver

Posted by: hhotek No Comments

February 18, 2010 –

In the face of constant skepticism, we here at HHO Tek strive constantly to determine what is too good to be true and what is not. That old axiom of, “if it sounds too good to be true, then it probably is”, not a bad axiom to measure great sounding claims against. However in today’s world of advancing knowledge and technology we routinely use many tools gadgets and such that would have fallen by the wayside, had this axiom been the yardstick to live by. We here at HHO Tek have one of those products which is frequently cast into the too good to be true box. If we claimed a fifty, seventy five or one hundred percent increase in miles per gallon that is where it would surely belong. However we have the proven catalytic chemistry of platinum, we have federal court vetted confirmation, we have 30 years of a satisfied customer base, which regularly reorders and confirms on a daily basis, our money back guaranteed claim, that you will get at least a twenty two percent increase in your fuel mileage when using our product as directed. If not send it back, we will refund your money on the day we receive the return. This year past we refunded money on 5 returns out of over a hundred thousand sold.
It is a true blessing and vindication of our purpose for selling the Platinum Gas Saver when we get a nationally recognized Magazine which anonymously ordered our product, and some fuel saving products from others claiming gas savings to test the advertised claims under real world conditions. When tested, we came out on top of the lineup, even though the test was not long enough to condition the engine of the test vehicle with our platinum. Had it run a full conditioning cycle we would have easily doubled the ten percentage increase recorded by JP Magazine.
We have a great many testimonials from our customers reporting even greater savings than what we guarantee. We do not publish them because they are a dime a dozen when appearing on a website. We have had people call in on our radio show giving their experience and savings. In any case, they are highly subjective and we leave proof to the tasting of the pudding, so to speak.
When a reputable well read, well established internationally circulated magazine such as JP gives your product an unsolicited favorable review it is a great feeling and boost in customer base for us Visit our site and you can find a link to the full JP article.
With the debut of the JP Magazine article our U.S. sales have taken a noticeable jump.
We thank you JP Magazine for having enough consumer concern to come to the fore with some real world testing.

Posted in: Green News
Oct
2009
7

A Precious Way To Save Fuel

Posted by: hhotek 1 Comment

It’s a rather incredible story involving a much desired scientific breakthrough and the travails of bringing it to the marketplace. There’s also a subplot involving attempts of others to bury the product so it will never, see the light of day. The device is called the “HHO Tek Platinum Gas Saver” and has been patented by a Brookline inventor named Joel Robinson. He claims the HHO Tek Platinum Gas Saver increases automotive mileage by about 20 percent and decreases harmful emissions. But he also admits he is having a heck of a time marketing it. “I’m an inventor,” Robinson said, sitting among piles of scientific papers and journals in the Brookline basement he uses as his office and factory, “I really don’t know much about marketing.” In fact, he said he is searching for a real hot-shot to sell this device to an American public that desperately wants it., The trouble is unless you subscribe to a few trade publications that Robinson has advertised in or happen to hear him on some late night radio show, chances are you’ve never heard of the HHO Tek Platinum Gas Saver. The circumstances of the invention are almost as odd as its current “factory.” Robinson had been working on a device using manganese to improve mileage, without much success. Then, in what seems like a scene out of “The Graduate,” a chemist mentioned the magic word … platinum now, platinum is a precious metal selling for about $600 an ounce. It hardly seems the most economical catalyst for increasing mileage. But Robinson knew about platinum’s special chemical properties. The catalytic converter in the exhaust system is coated with platinum which, through a chemical reaction, causes unburned gas fumes to be more fully burned before being expelled as exhaust. Robinson reasoned that if he could find a way to introduce platinum into an ‘internal combustion engine, it would produce less polluting carbon monoxide and unburned hydrocarbon residue, and more power per unit of fuel.
It only took Robinson a few months to convert the concept into a working device that meters platinum into the engine. A simple plastic bottle strapped to the engine holds and meters the flow of the platinum solution. A T-connector and rubber hose connects it to one of the engine’s air intakes. Once in the engine, the platinum allows the fuel to burn more efficiently. Robinson will sell you a kit with enough platinum to drive 30,000 miles. If your car gets less than 40 miles per gallon, the 20 percent in gas savings should more than offset the cost of the HHO Tek Platinum Gas Saver. For example, a car owner who gets 10 miles per gallon should net a savings of more than $1800 for every 30,000 miles. You might think the inventor of such a device would have the automobile companies beating a path to his door. Robinson has no doubt car manufacturers are aware of his work, but thus far only Komatsu has sent a representative to the Brookline factory. According to Robinson, Komatsu is the Japanese equivalent of Caterpillar. Robinson does say that he was offered $200,000 a year to sell the device to a company that wanted to take it off the market until it was further refined. He says the offer came through a third party so he won’t disclose its source. He won’t even play 20 questions. When asked if anyone other than a major oil company would have reason to make such an offer, he responds with a big Cheshire grin. Robinson won’t take the offer. It’s one thing to sell a child,” he said. “It’s another thing to bury one. “Robinson has sold about 500,000 of the devices through a mostly word-of-mouth campaign. He guarantees full satisfaction or your money back. So far his return rate is less than one percent. One of Robinson’s biggest problems in cracking the mass consumer market has been natural skepticism of devices reputed to improve gas mileage. Harry Hyde, a respected member of the auto racing community for more than 30 years and former manager of such great as Bobby Unser and Gordon Johncock, has tried a number of these devices in his North Carolina lab. “Ninety-nine out of -100 of these -devices are, you’ll pardon the expression, bullshit,” Hyde said. “This is the one out of 100 that isn’t.” For awhile Hyde sold the devices, but eventually found he just didn’t have the time. “Basically it gives a cleaner burn which protects the engines and increases mileage,” Hyde said. “The only trouble I found was sometimes the bottle breaks or it gets clogged, but I haven’t talked to Robinson for a couple years. I understand he made some improvements.” Indeed, Robinson has made a number of improvements. Each time, he replaces all devices out in the field free of charge. He also asks his customers to keep records of their mileage in order to build his data record. Thus far he has been unable to get any well known lab or government agency to test the device. He did run a controlled test with Management Transportation Corp. of Medford. They placed the device on 15 of their station wagons used as school buses. On average the cars showed a 28.3 percent increase in gas mileage. Though one car showed a 12 percent decrease. Robinson notes each car is different and mileage may vary because of a number of uncontrolled variables. “I don’t understand the results;” Richard Zimmerman president of the bus company, said. “But I believe them.” Zimmerman has not installed the devices in all of his vehicles. He said he would like to, but has run into personal problems in dealing with Robinson. The inventor speaks with a booming staccato delivery that some may find abrasive. He readily admits he is no master of marketing. Some of his sales troubles seem to stem from a fear the device may be stolen, despite his patent. He also wishes to be careful to avoid dealings or claims that might injure the product’s future.

by Jeff Zimmerman
Journal Staff

Posted in: Green News
Sep
2009
15

10% Ethanol…The inside scoop!

Posted by: hhotek 1 Comment

“In theory, all fuel-driven vehicles have a fuel economy that is directly proportional to the fuel’s energy content. In reality, there are many other variables that come in to play that affect the performance of a particular fuel in a particular engine. Ethanol contains approx. 34% less energy per unit volume than gasoline, and therefore in theory, burning pure ethanol in a vehicle will result in a 34% reduction in miles per US gallon, given the same fuel economy, compared to burning pure gasoline. Since ethanol has a higher octane rating, the engine can be made more efficient by raising its compression ratio. In fact using a variable turbocharger, the compression ratio can be optimized for the fuel being used, making fuel economy almost constant for any blend. .For E10 (10% ethanol and 90% gasoline), the effect is small (~3%) when compared to conventional gasoline,and even smaller (1-2%) when compared to oxygenated and reformulated blends. However, for E85 (85% ethanol), . Actual performance may vary depending on the vehicle. Based on EPA tests for all 2006 E85 models, the average fuel economy for E85 vehicles resulted 25.56% lower than unleaded gasoline. The EPA-rated mileage of current USA flex-fuel vehicles should be considered when making price comparisons, but it must be noted that E85 is a high performance fuel, with an octane rating of about 104, and should be compared to premium. In one estimate] the US retail price for E85 ethanol is 2.62 US dollar per gallon or 3.71 dollar corrected for energy equivalency compared to a gallon of gasoline priced at 3.03 dollar. Brazilian cane ethanol (100%) is priced at 3.88 dollar against 4.91 dollar for E25 (as July 2007).” source: http://en.wikipedia.org

How does this effect you?

So you have heard that ethanol is a better value for you? Its better for a number of reasons right? Well this is not true, if you drive the average car. There are some exceptions of course, and they are: High compression engines: Ferrari, porsche, lamborghini. Turbo cars: subarus,volvos,saab. But if you drive the everyday car ethanol effects you very much. It reduces your fuel mileage and causes carbon buildup in your engine along with a few more negative effects such as noticeable power loss. So if you have a choice choose to run non ethanol fuel because it helps noone, except the manufacturer. Its not even “Greener” it still has emissions, just as gas does and the fact that its less efficient makes it actually worse.

If you have no choice but to run ethanol enriched fuel you can counteract some of the negative effects it has with the HHO Tek Platinum Gas Saver

Sep
2009
3

HHO Tek Product back in the news again.

Posted by: hhotek No Comments



Our platinum injection system which is manufactured by national fuelsaver corp was in the news again yesterday. Here is the article
(HHO Tek is the US Distributor for the Platinum Gas Saver)

“Gas Saver” Invention That Actually Saves Gas . . . Who Knew?8-31-09 1:55 PM EDT

“23 mpg in the city and 45 on the highway.” Isn’t this what we all look at when choosing our car or truck? Smaller gas-burning engines get better mileage, so they say. Touted “mpg’s” seem to rise every year, especially with the addition of computers and advanced technology. Or do they? In reality, vehicles have shown less than a 5% increase in miles per gallon in the past 60 years, despite sophisticated technology.

In the face of tightening economies, excessive pollution and mileage performance have become concerns across the globe. Mexico City motorists have strictly-enforced “no drive” days in an attempt to control their pollution. Santiago, Chile drivers face the same concern, as do many U.S. cities that incur health warnings whenever smog levels soar. Eighty-six percent of all households own at least one vehicle and first-time car buyers increase an average of 10 percent per year. Nearly 378 million gallons of gasoline are consumed every day in the U.S.—that’s an average of 454 gallons per year for every man, woman and child!

Joel Robinson, Director of National Fuelsaver Corp. in Boston, Massachusetts, states, “It’s no wonder there’s been a lack of progress in the area of increased engine efficiency. The principles of automotive engineering have been grossly misunderstood.” National Fuelsaver Corp. devised the Platinum Gas Saver in 1977, which increases the mileage of gasoline-powered engines by 22 percent, meeting federal and state emission standards. Their premise was as significant as their invention.

In the mid 70’s, California, together with the federal government, decided to get serious about the amount of pollution in the atmosphere and mandated catalytic converters, which are basically mufflers whose internal surfaces have been coated with platinum. Not all the gas that enters an engine is consumed; that which escapes is released into the air as a pollutant. Platinum is a catalyst that causes unburned fuel to burn upon contact, eliminating pollution. It does not, however, create more miles per gallon with the increased burning of fuel, because the burning of this fuel occurs outside of the engine. The energy to power a vehicle is created only by the burning of fuel within the engine after the intake valve has closed and before the exhaust valve opens. Any additional burning of fuel outside the engine (i.e. within the catalytic converter) has no effect on mpg.

Textbooks state that 95 percent of the gas introduced into the engine is burned, driving the vehicle. However, according to EPA Federal Test Procedure data gathered in five separate tests, only 80 percent of gasoline is burned in perfectly-tuned gas engines. Additional research conducted by Champion Spark Plugs shows that the average engine is 12 percent worse than perfectly-tuned gas engines, bringing the burn percentage down even further to 68 percent. These two premises are the basis of National Fuelsaver’s Platinum Gas Saver, created more than 30 years ago. “It really comes down to chemistry,” continues Robinson. “By bringing the chemistry of platinum and unburned fuel into the engine itself, we were able to get added use from fuel that had previously been wasted and released into the environment as a pollutant.”

The Gas Saver is a modest device about the size of a video tape and holds a pre-measured platinum formula. The engine vacuum draws microscopic quantities of vaporized platinum into the intake manifold where it joins the fuel/air mixture entering the engine. With platinum in the flame zone, the fuel burn percentage inside the engine increases from 68 to 90 percent, a significant increase of 22 percent. That allows a vehicle to travel 22 percent faster, or 22 percent more miles per gallon, with the original amount of fuel.

Municipal officials in Los Angeles, Albuquerque and Denver, among others, have installed the gas-saving device on diesel-powered city vehicles. A five-year review of the Gas Saver Catalyst Delivery System was completed in 1985 by the Federal Consumer Protection Department, that stated that independent tests in 1980 and 1982 supported an even higher increase in mpg than the 22 percent claimed by the manufacturer, National Fuelsaver Corp. Results included: lowered emissions; reduced carbon build-up within the engine; increased engine life span; 3-5 point octane boost; significant pollution reduction; more power and acceleration and is safe and compatible with all gasoline burning engines. Their chemistry, science and premises proved valid.

So, why haven’t we heard of this device before? I can’t say, except maybe it’s simply the right time. Although more than half a million units have been sold, it is relatively unknown and un-utilized. But it is needed, nonetheless, especially in today’s unstable economy where we need a break to help us keep costs down, productivity up, pollution and waste down, and morale up. “The purchase and maintenance of an automobile is perhaps the second largest investment we make, next to a home,” says Robinson. “Anything that can increase efficiency and decrease cost is a real blessing in today’s world.”

CLICK HERE TO LEARN MORE ABOUT THE PLATINUM GAS SAVER!!!

Links to where this article can be found:
www.cnbc.com/hhotek
www.usatoday.com/hhotek
www.morningstar/news
www.reuters.com/gassaver
www.forbes.com/hhotek

Aug
2009
8

HHO Tek has made some changes to our dealer program

Posted by: hhotek No Comments

We have made a few changes to our Dealer Program so if you would like to sell and install the highest quality systems on the market then keep reading.

We build and design the BEST systems available. There are some companies out there that have systems that wholesale for $5100 and require an initial investment of $120,000 but thats not us. We want the honest hard working people to be able to afford to get into this business and with an exorbent initial buyins, thats not possible. We do everything in our power to look out for the “little guy” because thats exactly what we are.

Here at HHO Tek we pride ourselves in having the best quality at the best price we can offer. We do have a few requirements to become a dealer. First and most important is you must have a facility to install and maintain the systems for your customers. There is also small initial investment of $2000, and the only real reason for that is to eliminate people that want to do this on a whim. We like to ensure that our dealers are as serious about providing excellent service and making money, as we are.

To become a dealer, please email us

acura1.

Aug
2009
2

Can you run your car on water? Of course NOT!!!

Posted by: hhotek 3 Comments



Thanks to a few Scam artist out there like Water4Gas a lot of people that have heard of HHO, has also heard the phrase “run your car on water” That is 100% wrong. All that phrase is, is something to suck you in to buy there worthless book.
Another thing is there are a lot of guys out there are still operating on the principle that the engine burns the HHO gas as a fuel that is entirely wrong. A system like ours uses the hydrogen simply a catalyst, which means IT ENHANCES THE BURN RATE OF THE FUEL. In short the typical engine is less than 50% efficient that means it wastes over 50% of the fuel that enters the engine. OK what HHO or any catalyst does is improve that burn rate meaning you burn a higher percentage of the fuel. Therefore to maintain a car running at 55mph on the interstate that is 50% efficient, you are holding the throttle at 35% to maintain speed if you increase the efficiency to 65% then you have to hold the throttle at 25% (these numbers are just examples) therefore using less fuel.

Now lets look at how it works and the problems
An on-demand hydrogen system creates hydrogen using voltage from alternator most of us understand this part. Well with anything the are problems. The biggest one is scammers. Can anyone build a device that has plates in it and create hydrogen, absolutely! The kicker is can you create enough hydrogen from the system that your production actually outweighs the drain on the electrical system NO.
There are a few key points here:
1. Your engine uses hydrogen as a catalyst not as an additional fuel.
2. When running a system like these they take voltage from the alternator which is turned by the engine which uses fuel.

Ok so what we have here is a system that WILL increase mileage if you can create enough hydrogen at a low enough amperage. Otherwise adding a poorly designed hydrogen system will actually REDUCE your mileage. This is the biggest problem, guys in their kitchen have built pvc tubes with steel plates based on what they have seen online and sold them and people in good faith that bought into the idea. Then they dont work not because the technology because they bought something that is no where near efficient enough to actually see mileage gains
There are a few more glitches with this, you cant just install a system on a car and poof, improved mileage you have to modify the systems on the car that control fuel. This also is not very easy and technically illegal, because you are modifying the cars emission systems. So about 6 months ago we shifted gears somewhat and started to sell the platinum injection system for gasoline engines. The hydrogen is for diesels only because on diesels you simply install it no mods needed (except 2009 cummins and duramax engines). And the platinum system is cheaper and installs in 15 mins and requires no computer modifications to work properly.
BUT my geniuses from bulgaria have finally finished the software that allows us to tie into stock ECUs to make the mods we need via laptop without breaking any laws. Voila! done right? ..not really its still very expensive the complete system with the software module (which stays in the car) is pushing 1800$ this is too expensive for the average guy. NYC cabs love it but they drive 2000 miles a week so they can pay for it very quickly. Until I figure out how to make it cheaper it wont be available to the public.

If anyone would like to see how this works our research and development center is open to the public (upon signing a NDA and some other paperwork) You guys are more than welcome to come and see how this all works.

Posted in: Green News

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