Originally posted by BUSHWHACKER
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Using two stroke oil in a KZN185
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by flounderbout View PostOh, and the way in which "The engine-research centre of well known German car manufacurers" tend to publicise the results of "long term tests of diesel additives" is to tell some guy who can't spell on the internet, and then let him spread the word.
Saves on costs in these recessionary times.
Cutting steps in the roof of the world
Comment
-
Originally posted by flounderbout View Postfor a fuller explanation of the somewhat unusual tenets of homeopathy, I recommend Ben Goldacre's Bad Science.
AndyAndy
Comment
-
-
-
Originally posted by western uk View PostYou guy's wanna Google it and have a look, and then make your mind up. Not keep on poo pooing it.
Could be a good thing ?
If I dream up some new theory called Electroquarkhydration therapy, and publish a stream of blogs about it, no matter how illiterate and unscientific, then I become the de facto Google authority on it. The only people who pay any attention to it will be credulous types, who then refer back to my blog, and before you know it a bunch of old shite has gathered a host of reference material all accessible by Google, and all referring to me. Suddenly a Google search throws up what is apparently a body of material, which gives credence to the original. And so it goes on.
The same goes for conspiracy theories, and a lot of complementary medicine theories.
Contrast published works in journals etc, where my ridiculous theory would never be published in the first place, and if it were it would immediately be rubbished by serious contributors.
This doesn't mean that the internet can't be a useful resource. It just means you have to be infinitely more sceptical of material you find there.
If the source is not credible, then find a proper source and re-evaluate.
"Yamaha-fan" is scientifically illiterate.
Scientifically:
"The 2-stroke oil will be absorbed by the diesel (emulsion)" Boll ocks. Emulsion means precisely that two liquids are intermixed without absorption.
"the emission values as measured are by far better with use of 2-stroke oil than without"
O rly?
So let me get this right. The Sulphur in Diesel Fuels Regulations were introduced to reduce emissions, and in particular soot emissions related to sulphur content in diesel. But by adding a sulphur rich additive to your low sulphur fuel, you can reduce the emissions that arise from err, sulphur rich fuel?
Riiiigggghhhht.
It is possible that the European Union hates you, and as a result has imposed some emission-reducing measures that actually increase emissions and kill your engine to boot.
Meanwhile the engine manufacturers hate you, because they have no interest in reliability and customer satisfaction, instead they just want your engine to die as soon as possible so you have to get a new one.
Oh and the fuel additive manufacturers hate you so much that instead of selling a diesel additive that has all these wonderful effects and which would be very cheap for them, thus resulting in huge profits, instead they forgo those profits just so that you suffer. Mwahaha.
Or it is just about possible, at a stretch, that the whole thing is a load of arse.
And that is why every forum which mentions the thing (Ford, Landrover, here etc etc) recycles the same claims, in similar words, and have all quite obviously originated from the same scientifically illiterate source. And why they all cite the same "long term tests", not one of which tests you will find anywhere.
Of course one option is to make your mind up based on nothing more than a whim, and then accept everything you can find that supports your arbitrary view, whilst rejecting everything that goes against it. Western UK.
After all, that's what the Daily Mail does.
Comment
Comment