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Gasoline crisis answer

Part 2

You Research the Issue... You be the Judge.

If your verdict is the same as ours, won't you write to your elected officials....write and inform them that there are better ways to conserve gasoline .... yes, there are better ways than to simply raise the price.

Wouldn't you really like to drive from 110 to 160 miles on one gallon of gasoline ?

THE OIL FILTER

Beside gasoline, the only other petroleum product repeatedly used in great quantity in the conventional car is the oil place into the engine. Lubricating oil is the life-blood of the internal combustion engine. It cools, cleans , seals and lubricates. Larger engines require more oil, smaller engines less.

THE PROBLEM

Engine oil gets dirty. Dirty oil does not do a good job of cooling, cleaning, sealing or lubricating the inside of the engine. Therefore, all automobiles manufacturers recommend draining the dirty oil and replacing it with clean oil. Your owners manual tells how often these oil changes are recommended.

NOTE : To help keep the engine oil cleaner for a longer period of time, cars come equipped with an oil filter. There are two types of filtering systems in use today. One is called the "full flow", the other is called "partial flow".

Still theses filters do not keep out all of the contamination, and eventually they must be replaced and the oil changed.

QUESTION:

What if someone were to invent an oil filter that would keep the oil clean 100% of the time ?

ANSWER:

"For a long time oil technologists have been satisfied that oil retains its lubricating efficiency until the oil is completely used up . . . there is no reason why an oil should not be better after use than unused oil- - in fact, the result of lubricating oils do not acquire their full lubricating efficiency until they have been in service for some time under conditions of heating and contact with air . . . . Future, it is generally agreed by the majority of oil technologists that oil after use and efficiently filtered a number of times is really a super-refined oil ". Abstracts from The Automobile Engineer, January 1936, pages 31 - 32.

To further substantiate the above abstract, the interested researcher shoal read the following textbooks and reports:

Lubrication of Industrial And Marine Machinery, by William Gordon Forbes

1943, John Wiley and Sons Inc., New York , New York, Chapter 1 - 11 and 28 - 30.

Properties of Lubricating Oil and Engines Deposits, by C.A. Bouman, 1950, Macmillan an Co. Limited, St. Matin's Street , London.

The Practice of Lubrication - - An Engineering Treatise On the Origin, Nature, And Testing Of Lubricants, Their Selection, Application And Use, By T. C Thomas, 1951, McGraw Hill Book Company, Inc.

Industrial Lubrication Practice, by Paul D. Hobson, 1955, The Industrial Press, 93 Worth St.., New York, NewYork.

The Performance of Lubricating Oils, by H. H Zuidema 1959, Rein hold Publishing Corporation, New York, New York.

" 50,000 Miles Without An Oil Change" Popular Science, March 1965, page 210.

QUESTION:

Has anyone invented an oil filter that will indeed keep the oil analytically clean 100% of the time ?

ANSWER:

A. "A Rectifier Keeps Engine Oil Perfectly Clean", Scientific American, October 1924, page 259.

B. "A New Oil Filter", The Automobile Engineer, January 1936, page 30 +

We strongly urge the reader to examine this well documented report. It shows pictures of the oil filter , explains its function and provides before and after analyses of the oil. The filter keeps the oil perfectly clean up to 10,000 miles, the instead of draining the oil, they simply changes the filter pads. Thus, the oil does not become contaminated and does not need to be drained.

What about today, over 40 years later ?

C. The Frantz oil Filter " Look in the yellow pages of any large city telephone directory under FILTERS. . . . now look for:

FRANTZ OIL CLEANER The names of several local distributors should be listed.

The following is a quote from the Frantz Oil Filter Company Literature (#973-303) entitled: Facts About Oil Filtering Systems".

"The Frantz Oil Filter uses an element made of highly refined, uniform, very dense, absorbent paper. This element is so effective that it will remove particles as small as those in cigarette smoke 0.1 microns, and due to this paper's natural affinity for water , it will absorb up to 6 ounces of water, with no change in its filtering abilities.

"In nearly 20 years of use ,no damage has ever been recorded due to the escape of particles of the Frantz element into the engine system. Conclusive proof of this is that after due research and testing , the Federal aviation Administration has granted the Aero Frantz certification for use on light aircraft engines.

"Due to the Frantz Oil Filter's very effective filter element, it can perform a number of essential tasks for the internal combustion engine power, as well as the general American economy.

Properly installed & serviced, the Frantz OIL FILTER can do the following:

1. Keeps ENGINE OIL CLEAN 100 % OF THE TIME

2. SAVES FROM 70% to 90% ON BY EXTENDING OIL DRAIN INTERVALS.

3. HELPS CONSERVE OUR NO. 1 RESOURCE . . . . OIL.

"THAT'S A LOT TO CLAIM FOR A SIMPLE PARTIAL FLOW FILTERING DEVICE - - - CAN IT BE BACKED UP ?

"Absolutely ! The Frantz Oil Filter gas been on the market for nearly 20 years. Millions of units are in use. It is sold on a ONE YEAR MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE which states: ` The purchase price will be refunded if within one year from the date of installation the Frantz Oil Filter fails to keep engine oil analytically clean ( based on independent Laboratory analyses) under normal operating conditions.'

"It's dirt in your oil that wears out your engine. With the Frantz, the dirt is in the filter . . .not in the engine.

" . . . . . .Hundreds of testimonials have been received attesting to the Frantz' ability to reduce maintenance costs and save on oil and filter expenses, not only on passenger cars, but also on marine, industrial and heavy equipment engines."

PROOF POSITIVE

This writer has talked personally with many satisfied Frantz Oil Filter users. We have tested this oil filter ourselves with the results claimed the company. Our engine oil is always clean.

Also, we have on file testimonial letters from a sheriff's department, mechanics, taxi companies, school bus, city bus, and trucking fleets. All highly recommended this filter.

We further understand there are other filters of this type now available on the market.

MY FELLOW CITIZEN

Think of all the oil needlessly going down the drain every year. Think how it erodes our ecology and wastes a precious resource.

We here and now offer proof positive that oil saving equipment does exist.

What will you do with this information ?

Are you one who believes in TRUE CONSERVATION and not WASTE ?

Then join us in an effort to inform our elected and appointed officials.

If the auto manufactures should be required to have various pollution controls on each car, should they not be encouraged to install a filter that keeps the oil in your car engine clean ? !

GAS SAVING ENGINES

I suppose if we were to place a roadblock on a busy freeway and "stop" every passenger car, we would observe the following:

For every 100 cars stopped - - - 98 would have engine designed to burn gasoline. The other 2 would be designed to burn diesel fuel.

Most big trucks traveling the highways are designed to burn diesel fuel.

QUESTIONS

Have other engines been invented . . . .engines that can operate on more than one type of fuel ? What about engines that would not need either gasoline or diesel fuel ? What about engines that do not need a petroleum based fuel at all ? And what about pollution free engines ? Have these been invented ?

ANSWER

To answer these questions, let us first of all list a small sample of what's already been written on this subject covering the past 50 years:


	April 1922	Scientific American, 	
			page 262
			Steam car that is different 	
				 
	January 1928	Scientific American, pages 
			44 -46 
			Will the stream automobile  
			return ? 
 
	October 5, 1929	Literary Digest, page 23 
			Gas- electric auto gearless 
			automobile. 
 
	January 1930	Scientific American . page 
			65 .  Gas-electric auto. 
 
	June 3, 1939	Business Week, pages 44- - 
			45 
			Multi-fuel engine. 
 
	December 13,	Newsweek, page 69 
	    1943		Ford's ideal motor; opposed 
			piston engine. 
 
	March 1946	Popular Science, page 78 
			59 lb. motor propels 	
			Crosely. 
 
	July 1946	Popular Science, page 130 - 
			131 
			Rotating pistons; engine 	
			with 3 moving parts. 
 
	October 1948	Popular Science, page 169 
			Steam conversion powered 
			stock car. 
 
	July 1949	Popular Science, page 216 
			Turbine drives small steam 
			car. 
 
	November 1950	Science Digest, pages 29 - 
			34 
			Revolution of the free-	
			piston engine. 
 
	November 1951	Popular Science, page 193 
			General Motors has built an 
			engine that uses both 	
			gasoline and alcohol ! 
 
	April 25, 1953	Business Week , page 101 -
			107 
			Generating more power 	
			from less fuel -- free piston 
			engine--production. 
 
	April 23, 1956	Time. page 102 
			New Engine - -free piston. 
 
	June 1956	Scientific American, page 	
			66 
			Free piston engine. 
 
	July 1956	Popular Science, page 101 
			Free piston engine tried in a 
			car! 
 
	July 1957	Science Digest, page 93 
			Free piston engine will 	
			power cars and plants. 
 
	January 1961	Science Digest 
			Challenge to the gas 	
			engine. 
 
	May 1962	Reader's Digest, pages 109 
			- 112 
			Auto engine burns almost 	 
			anything! 
 
	October 12	Business Week, page 48 
	    1963		35 mpg engine. 
 
	September 1968	Mechanix Illustrated, with  
			photos, 
			Ford steam engine. 
 
	April 1969	Popular Science 
			Amazing Ponitac mini car! 
			(not for sale.) 
 
	May 1969	Popular Science,  
			New French engine. 
 
	June 1974	Popular Science 
			Pollution-free engine saves 
			fuel. 
 
	May 1976	Mechanix Illustrated, 
			Steam engine for your car. 
 
	January 1977	Mechanix Illustrated, pages 
			50-51 
			Multi-fuel Bricklin engine. 
 

Looking back over the written record we find that many gas saving engines have already been invented. Let us take a look at several of these inventions.

A. "Revolutionary Auto Engine" The Reader's Digest, November 1950 pages 77 - 79.

This report describes a motor that yields top efficiency on almost any fuel.

Thirty percent increase mileage- - No engine knocking - - Reduced refining costs - - No new problems in auto design - - Large extension of world's supply of rude oil.

Note: The above caption and commentary was written in 1950 !

ALTERNATE FUELS

we found proof positive that fuels other than gasoline have already been developed and tested.

* Now our researchers lead us to find that other types of ENGINES have been invented . . .. engines that can operate on these other fuels.

Our goal is simple and singular.

Our goal is to inform our elected and appointed officials that gas savings equipment, engines, and cars have already been invented.

These inventions will save gas - - many do not even need gasoline.

Therefore, we do not need to pay higher taxes for gasoline as a means of "conservation".

B. "The Most Efficient Ever Invented - - The Bourke Engine".

We have researched over a hundred pages of written material on the Bourke engine, We have talked with a member of the former corporation established to build motor. Magazines and newspaper reports abound . . . . even a book has been written about this revolutionary engine.

The following is a brief summary of our research findings.

HISTORY

The history of the Bourke engine and the details about how it operates are presented in a documentary written by Mr. and Mrs. Bourke the year before Russell Bourke died (1968). The copy we have on file was printed by :

D.D Enterprise 5212 Vineland Ave. No. Hollywood California 91601

The first edition price was $3.00 The Bourke engine patents are #2,122,676 2,122,677 and 2,172,670.

TEXT

the Bourke engine operates on the basis of a very simple principle, yet engineering and development involved is by no means simple. The basic component is of the opposed-cylinder, two-stroke type. However, these two-cylinder opposed units can be bolted together in clusters to achieve an engine of almost any displacement value desired. The system has co- operative pistons. They are connected by one rigid connecting rod that shuttles through an oil reservoir in a sealed crankcase. There are only two moving parts in the engine: a)he piston connecting rod and b) the crank shaft. The multitude of other parts found in a conventional internal combustion engine are not needed in the Bourke engine.

The July 1954 Issue of Hot Rod Magazine Ran A fairly detailed report on the Bourke engine.

Its chief claims are these:

There are fewer moving parts, therefore , the engine is lighter in weight than most motors, yet it has far greater power out-put (the engine can be operated at much higher rpm without appreciable power fall-off). The engine has no mechanical sounds and can be operated in any position desired.

We would like to draw special attention to one additional point. The Bourke engine operates on low quantity fuel with practically no exhaust fumes, no frame and very little heat.

As the reporter for Hot Rod Magazine said:

" Practical economy was the designer's prime requisite. It can be manufactured cheaply, can be run for exceptionally long periods of time without need of being torn down (parts in one unit after more than 2,000 logged hours are still as good as new - - as is the oil that was used during the entire running time) and it is economical to operate".

C. "Revolution of the Free-Piston Engine" Popular Mechanics , September 1950 pages 155- 188+

This is another new (in America) concept of engineering.

"In your present engine there are masses of moving metal - - connecting rods, crankshaft wheel. The new engine eliminates these parts. Two piston slide freely in a horizontal cylinder."

This engine requires no spark plug. It is quiet, vibration free, light. It is ideal for aircraft.

"Further, the free-piston is by all odds the most efficient power plant ever developed -- an important point since the world stock pile of fuels is steadily dwindling"

This report goes on to give the history of the free- piston development. There were crude models built as long as 100 years ago. In the 1920's the Swedes invented an awkward model. The Germans used such an engine in their war-time submarines.

The United States Navy began studying the concept in 1943.

The report goes on to state:

"Applications to automobiles appear to be well in the future, but such applications have dazzling appeal. A free-piston engine would be unbelievably quiet and vibrationless. It would be so small that it could be placed anywhere that it would give 50 to 60 miles per gallon of fuel - - - diesel oil or kerosene."

The report concludes:

" In sum , there is hardly a place where fuel is converted into energy that the new engine won't find application. It is more versatile than the diesel, three times more economical than the open-cycle gas turbine, cheaper than the steam plant. Prophecy is never completely safe with any development as new as this. But everything indicates that the free-piston engine will have quite as large an impact on all our lives in the second half of the 20th century as the conventional internal- combustion engine had during the first half."

The above report is not an isolated article. Books have been written on the free-piston engine. Its use in stationary power plants is widespread. Details of its production and how it works are found in Business Week, April 25, 1953, pages 101 - 106.

FURTHERMORE

General Motors Corporation has a free-piston car. See the report with accompanying photos in the July 1956 issue of Popular Science.

This report states:

"Like true gas turbines, it isn't finicky about fuel - -experimental engines have run on such a off beat hydrocarbons as whale and peanut oil. One big advantage is the dilution of exhaust gases by compressed air, which means that turbine blades need not spin in destructive high temperatures."

"G.M spokesman do not foresee commercial highway use for five to 10 years."

Remember, this was written in 1956.

Have you seen a free-piston powered car recently ?

D. "Amazing Swirl Engine Boosts Mileage 60%, " Mechanix Illustrated, October 1966, pages 86 - 88+

This , another new concept in engineering, was developed by Dr. Julius E. Witsky. Testing the engine was carried out at the Southwest Research Institute, San Antonio, Texas.

The engine will run smoothly on a variety of fuels including but not limited to gasoline or diesel. The overall air-to-fuel ratios are 100:1 at low rpm and idle. The fuel economy is about 60 percent greater than today's carbureted engine. The smog emissions are greatly reduced.

We encourage the reader to study this entire report and judge for yourself the possibilities-the great savings in our gasoline and oil supplies- and the improved performance one could have in the family car Here and Now.

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