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From: jimp on 5 Aug 2010 13:23 In sci.physics David <oswald_eppers(a)hotmail.com> wrote: > On Jun 9, 4:11 pm, david.bostw...(a)chemistry.gatech.edu (David > Bostwick) wrote: >> In article <wildbilly-A336DD.09490509062...(a)c-61-68-245-199.per.connect.net.au>, Billy <wildbi...(a)withouta.net> wrote: >> >> >> >> >> >> >In article <huj38u$bs...(a)news-int.gatech.edu>, >> > david.bostw...(a)chemistry.gatech.edu (David Bostwick) wrote: >> >> >> In article >> >> <1682786e-7ea7-4cc6-b356-c8fa38eae...(a)s41g2000vba.googlegroups.com>, >> >> Archimedes Plutonium <plutonium.archime...(a)gmail.com> wrote: >> >> [...] >> >> >> >I don't want an answer from a group of sentimentalists. I want a >> >> >proper scientific >> >> >accounting. >> >> >> Hah. You want someone to validate your opinions, which can't be done because >> >> >> they're 100% screwball. You want others to do the experiments, which you >> >> then >> >> ignore or disparage because they don't match your opinions. >> >> >He gave two citations. You just asked the wrong question. You want to >> >know about the piston rings and the piston cylinder, and what happens >> >when an abrasive substance is rubbed between them (loss of compression >> >and huge repair bills, if the polar substance can find its way to the >> >compression chamber). >> >> No, he wants, A) validation of his opinion, regardless of facts, or B) someone >> else to do the work.- Hide quoted text - >> >> - Show quoted text - > > do you like caramel candies? The process of caramelization consists of > heating sugar slowly to around 170 °C (340 °F). As the sugar melts, > the molecules break down and re-form into compounds with a > characteristic color and flavor. This is what happens in your car > engine in the presence of sugar. You are producing caramel candies in > your engine :-) > > David > www.2ajobguide.com Sugar is not soluable in gasoline, so how would it get past all the filters to get into the engine in the first place? -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |