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Oil industry suppressed plans for 200-mpg car
TimesOnline ^
| March 31, 2003
| Simon de Bruxelles
Posted on 04/09/2003 1:08:01 PM PDT by Nov3
THE original blueprints for a device that could have revolutionised the motor car have been discovered in the secret compartment of a tool box.
A carburettor that would allow a car to travel 200 miles on a gallon of fuel caused oil stocks to crash when it was announced by its Canadian inventor Charles Nelson Pogue in the 1930s.
But the carburettor was never produced and, mysteriously, Pogue went overnight from impoverished inventor to the manager of a successful factory making oil filters for the motor industry. Ever since, suspicion has lingered that oil companies and car manufacturers colluded to bury Pogues invention.
Now a retired Cornish mechanic has enlisted the help of the University of Plymouth to rebuild Pogues revolutionary carburettor, known as the Winnipeg, from blueprints he found hidden beneath a sheet of plywood in the box.
The controversial plans once caused panic among oil companies and rocked the Toronto Stock Exchange when tests carried out on the carburettor in the 1930s proved that it worked.
Patrick Davies, 72, from St Austell, had owned the tool box for 40 years but only recently decided to clean it out. As well as drawings of the carburettor, the envelope contained two pages of plans, three test reports and six pages of notes written by Pogue.
They included a report of a test that Pogue had done on his lawnmower, which showed that he had managed to make the engine run for seven days on a quart (just under a litre) of petrol.
The documents also described how the machine worked by turning petrol into a vapour before it entered the cylinder chamber, reducing the amount of fuel needed for combustion.
Mr Davies has had the patent number on the plans authenticated, proving that they are genuine documents.
He said: I couldnt believe what I saw. I used to be a motor mechanic and I knew this was something else altogether. I was given the tool box by a friend after I helped to paint her house in 1964. Her husband had spent a lot of time in Canada.
The announcement of Pogues invention caused enormous excitement in the American motor industry in 1933, when he drove 200 miles on one gallon of fuel in a Ford V8. However, the Winnipeg was never manufactured commercially and after 1936 it disappeared altogether amid allegations of a political cover-up.
Dr Murray Bell, of the University of Plymouths department of mechanical and marine engineering, said he would consider trying to build a model of the Pogue carburettor.
Engineers who have tried in the past to build a carburettor using Pogues theories have found the results less than satisfactory. Charles Friend, of Canadas National Research Council, told Marketplace, a consumer affairs programme: You can get fantastic mileage if youre prepared to de-rate the vehicle to a point where, for example, it might take you ten minutes to accelerate from 0 to 30 miles an hour.
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News
KEYWORDS: automobiles; conspiracy; oilmarkets; tinfoil
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OK conspiracy freaks here it is again. A thermodynamic analysis of the Otto cycle says this is impossible but every time I see this come up it piques my attention!
1
posted on
04/09/2003 1:08:01 PM PDT
by
Nov3
To: All
2
posted on
04/09/2003 1:08:57 PM PDT
by
Support Free Republic
(Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
To: Nov3
Yeah, this is the same type of moronic junk-science that says depleted uranium is radioactive. Sure it is, in multi-tonne quantities... morons, all of them.
3
posted on
04/09/2003 1:09:49 PM PDT
by
dagar
To: Nov3
OK conspiracy freaks here it is again. A thermodynamic analysis of the Otto cycle says this is impossible but every time I see this come up it piques my attention! And here's why no one picked up on it:
Engineers who have tried in the past to build a carburettor using Pogues theories have found the results less than satisfactory. Charles Friend, of Canadas National Research Council, told Marketplace, a consumer affairs programme: You can get fantastic mileage if youre prepared to de-rate the vehicle to a point where, for example, it might take you ten minutes to accelerate from 0 to 30 miles an hour.
4
posted on
04/09/2003 1:10:16 PM PDT
by
Poohbah
(Crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and hear the lamentations of their women!)
To: Nov3
Engineers who have tried in the past to build a carburettor using Pogues theories have found the results less than satisfactory. Charles Friend, of Canadas National Research Council, told Marketplace, a consumer affairs programme: You can get fantastic mileage if youre prepared to de-rate the vehicle to a point where, for example, it might take you ten minutes to accelerate from 0 to 30 miles an hour.Odd how this paragraph is saved till the end, after all the conspiracy stuff.
To: Trailerpark Badass
Doh!
Comment #7 Removed by Moderator
To: Nov3
I found plans for an anti-gravity device in my grandfather's underwear drawer after he passed away. I built it in my backyard and it worked perfectly.
Unfortunately, I left the plans on top of the device and watched them both float off.
8
posted on
04/09/2003 1:12:36 PM PDT
by
dead
To: Nov3
yeah. in the same toolbox was the cure for cancer suppressed by the american cancer society.
dep
9
posted on
04/09/2003 1:12:45 PM PDT
by
dep
(Ense Petit Placidam Sub Libertate Qvietem)
To: Nov3
Charles Nelson P{ogue took credit for the invention, but it was actually his wife who found the carburettor in the wrckage of a crashed alien spaceship. And it requires a special brand of gasoline, refined only when the moon is full, and the car containing the device must always be parked in a direction facing Roswell, NM.
Other than that, the article is entirely accurate, or so the voices being beamed into my head tell me. I just wish they'd shut up for a while so I could sleep.
To: Nov3
Well, it would be a distator to car makers if 1. It was cheaper to operate their product and more people could afford it and those who alread could afford it could do so at a higher price and 2. The enviornmentalist rationale for a substantial portion of auto industry regulation were eliminiated. Wouldn't it?
To: Nov3
Silly
12
posted on
04/09/2003 1:13:07 PM PDT
by
RichardW
To: Nov3
revolutionary carburettor, known as the WinnipegA day late and a dollar short - we've moved onto fuel injection coupled with superchargers and turbochargers and not to mention VAST improvements in diesel technology even ...
13
posted on
04/09/2003 1:13:37 PM PDT
by
_Jim
( // NASA has a better safety record than NASCAR \\)
To: Nov3
Only problem with this car is that you have to wear a tinfoil hat when you drive it.
14
posted on
04/09/2003 1:14:09 PM PDT
by
ladtx
("...the very obsession of your public service must be Duty, Honor, Country." D. MacArthur)
To: Nov3
If such a device was possible to build "Smokey Yunick" would have built it before his death.
To: Nov3
Mr Davies has had the patent number on the plans authenticated, proving that they are genuine documents. If there is a patent number, then there is a patent. And patents are public documents. Thus, the day that patent issued, is was no longer a supressible secret. And the day that patent expired (in the 40s or 50s) it was public domain for anyone to implement.
Which all suggests quite compellingly that the whole thing is a bunch of hooey. Any decent journalist would inquire as to what the patent number is.
16
posted on
04/09/2003 1:15:08 PM PDT
by
Atlas Sneezed
("Democracy, whiskey! And sexy!")
To: Nov3
http://www.starrotor.com/indexflash.htm StarRotor Engine Properties
(place your mouse on green text for more information)
High efficiency (44%-64%)
Low Pollution
Low Cost
Low Maintenance
Long Life
High Power Density
Negligible Vibration
Multi-fuel
The StarRotor engine uses the Brayton cycle, the same thermodynamic cycle employed by jet engines. Ambient air is compressed to about 6 atm, and then is preheated by a heat exchanger. The preheated compressed air is further heated by combusting fuel. The hot, high-pressure gas expands, thereby doing work. In the heat exchanger, thermal energy is recovered from the exhaust gases. The compressor and expander use a gerotor, a positive-displacement device that can process the large volumes of gas required by Brayton cycle engines.
To: Nov3
To: Boston Capitalist
Well, it would be a distator Is a distator kinda like a yam?
To: Nov3
I heard about that! It was a low maintance car too. All you had to do was replace the rubber bands when they break. :)
20
posted on
04/09/2003 1:17:17 PM PDT
by
John123
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