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Ron Novak's Do-It-Yourself Water Injection System |
You can improve your car
engine's starting ability, pickup, and fuel economy by constructing a homemade
water injection system -- for a total cost of under five dollars! And you'll
spend that small amount of money (heck, it takes more cash than that to buy
one tank of gas nowadays!) entirely on parts -- because all the information
you'll need to "inject" your own auto is right here in this article!

MOTHER's staffers have installed and tested one of the "engine aids"
(and, by jeepers, the thing works!), but we can't take the credit for
inventing the build-it-yourself device. Nope, all the know-how for this
half-hour (or less) shop project comes from a very generous -- and clever --
visitor to this magazine's seminars ... Mr. Ron Novak.
Ron openly shared his under-the-hood "secret" during the July Mother
Earth Week with everyone who was interested. (And once the word of his
brainstorm got out, the inventive fellow spent as much of his visit teaching
as he did studying!)
Actually, Mr. Novak made two improvements to his 1978 Honda CVCC station wagon
before he started the long trek from his upstate New York home to MOM's
western North Carolina land. The traveling seminarian's major modification was
to install a homemade water injection system that feeds a 4:1 H2O/alcohol mist
into his vehicle's carburetor ... but he also added a drag-reducing "air
dam", under the Honda's front bumper, to further improve his car's gas
mileage. [EDITORS NOTE: MOTHER's ever-busy researchers are hoping to report --
in an upcoming issue -- on this second (the "fender extender")
idea.]
Ron got the notion for his water injector from some automotive magazine
advertisements that offered a $50 fuel-saving device. The canny Nor'-easterner
carefully read the literature about the expensive accessory and realized that
the mileage-extender consisted of little more than a bottle (partly filled
with some "miracle" solution) that was rigged with [1] an underwater
air intake line that bubbled air through the liquid and [2] a mist-grabbing
outflow tube to feed the "foamed-up" vapor directly into the
engine's carburetor. The wet air was reputed to help produce more efficient
fuel-burning (by "atomizing" the gasoline droplets and lowering the
fuel's temperature) and to improve the power plant's overall performance and
life span (by cleaning out the engine's carbon buildup).
Novak figured that he could make a similar fuel-saver himself ... if he could
solve one problem: What "gadget" could he put on his underwater air
tube to produce those myriad tiny air bubbles? Well, the tinkerer tried just
about every device he could think of (including the pinched end of a cigarette
holder), but - in spite of his efforts - the bubbler had him stumped. For lack
of one simple piece, Ron couldn't get the whole dang system to work!
Then one day, while the New Yorker was running an errand in a pet shop, he
noticed a small aquarium "air stone" that was (what else?) busily
breaking an incoming oxygen supply into tiny little bubbles ... to mix air
into the fish tank's water. Ron bought one of the low-cost objects, attached
it to his homemade injector's underwater tubing, and - eureka! - he was in
business!
The entire installation procedure was easy, inexpensive, and legal (Ron didn't
fiddle with his car's EPA emissions devices). And Novak's "new"
water-injected Honda ran better -- and further on one tank of gas -- than it
ever had in its life!
Since that first attempt, Ron has installed his "bubbling bottles"
on all sorts of vehicles ... from a BMW R60/2 motorcycle ... to a 1973 Opel GT
... to a 1968 Cadillac. In each case, gas mileage improved dramatically! So,
folks, there "ain't no reason" why you can't get better performance
and gas mileage by building your own water injector ... no matter what form of
gasoline-engined transportation you're driving! All you have to do is read
this article's sidebar, head off to the nearest pet store for your "auto
parts", and then get to work!
EDITOR'S NOTE: People who read about Pat Goodman's water injection system (see
"Water Injection Wizardry" in MOTHER NO. 59, page 46) may wonder
about the differences between Ron's homemade "carburetor squirter"
and Pat's more sophisticated - and, of course, more expensive - device.
The most important functional distinction between the two is that Novak's
injector "bubbles " most rapidly when the car is idling and least
intensely when the vehicle's under full throttle. Goodman's smog
pump-controlled instrument, on the other hand, increases its vaporizing
activity with higher engine output. Pat's "mistifier" will therefore
produce a much greater overall boost in gas mileage than the do-it-yourself
device does ... but can only be added to a car that already has a smog pump.
Ron's homemade system can be installed on just about any vehicle on the road
today.
Installing a hydro-atomization
system on your car -- a modification which adds damp air to the engine's
intake mixture and produces a variety of benefits -- involves little more than
the purchase of a three-inlet valve (such as a fish tank's air regulator), an
aquarium air stone, five feet of 1/8" clear tubing, and a strong plastic
bottle ... plus about 15 minutes of under-the-hood tinkering.
When MOTHER's mechanics tackled the job, they were able to pick up all of the
necessary pieces -- with the exception of the $1.98 brass valve -- at a local
pet shop for only $1.74. The boys then simply drove around the corner and
recycled a photochemical bottle from a trash bin behind a photo shop, stopped
by a nearby plumbing supply store to pick up the three-way valve, and returned
to the research center to actually install the parts, which took just a shade
over ten minutes.
You can begin your installation by splicing the valve into one of the vacuum
lines which comes from the base of the carburetor. (In many cars the
distributor advance hose would be the best choice for valve-insertion.
However, the Honda Civic CVCC that MOTHER operated on has a very convenient
1/4" vacuum line running to a fresh air valve, so MOTHER's crew tapped
into that hose with their makeshift control.)
Next, securely suspend the liquid-containing bottle in the engine compartment.
(In this case our research team fabricated a holder from an old coat hanger
and bolted the assembly to an existing fastener on the left wheel well of the
Honda.) Once your tank is in position, drill two 1/8" holes in the top of
the container, one on each side of the cap. Then run a suitable length of the
1/8" hose from the remaining outlet on the three-way valve to one of the
1/8" openings, and allow 1/2 " of the tubing to enter the reservoir.
Now take the rest of your 1/8" hose, insert it through the unoccupied
1/8" hole, attach the air stone to the inside end of this line, and slide
the aerator and tube into the bottle until it just touches bottom. The
leftover 1/8" line -- which protrudes from the container -- should be
snipped off to about three inches in length.
Finally, fill the reservoir -- to about an inch from the top -- with a
solution of four parts water to one part alcohol (the latter keeps the water
from freezing in winter), start your motor, let it warm up, and then adjust
the valve until a gentle bubbling comes from the air stone. Once that's done,
it's time for a test drive!
MOTHER's researchers noted an immediate improvement in low-RPM power which
helped the Honda to accelerate up hills that had previously required a
downshift -- and a significant reduction in vibration. Better yet -- after we
ran three tanks of gas (and a quart of fluid) through the engine -- the
Civic's gas mileage jumped from 32 to 34 MPG. Plus, much to the auto owner's
surprise, water injection cured a longstanding cold weather starting problem.
In fact, the driver claims that the modification "paid for itself"
with that starting improvement alone ... and that, in his opinion, the power
gain and gas savings are icing on the cake!
Chapter
1
Introduction
to a Farmer's Fuel ... Alcohol
Introductory
Overview of the Alcohol Production Flow Chart
A
Short But Complex Story About Enzymes and Their Functions
Chapter
2
Farm
Crops for Alcohol Fuel
Raw
Materials
More
on Raw Materials
Feedstock
Handling and Storage
Chapter
3
Basic
Steps in the Production of Ethyl Alcohol
More
On Conversion and Fermentation
Fermentation
Addendum
Alcohol
Yield
Chapter
4
Control of Infection by Planned Sanitation in the Production of Fuel
or Gasohol Alcohol
Chapter
5
MOTHER's
Mash Recipes for Alcohol Production
Important!
Read Before Making Mash
Preparing
a Mash From Saccharide-rich Materials
A
Handy Hydrometer Jacket
Chapter
6
Distiller's
Feeds
By-product
Utilization
Animal
Feed By-product
More
Information On By-product Utilization
Chapter
7
How
the Distillation Process Works
Packed
Column
Perforated
Plate
Bubble
Cap Plate
Solar
Stills
The
Reasoning Behind MOTHER's Still Design
Still
Operation
Making
Your First "Run"
"Economizing"
Your Alcohol Production
Chapter
8
Six-Inch
Column Still Plans
Three-Inch
Column Still Plans
Bill
of Materials
Chapter
9
Two Low-cost Backyard Stills
How To Adapt Your Automobile Engine For Ethyl Alcohol Use
Ron Novak's Do-It-Yourself Water Injection System
Mother’s
Alcohol Fuel Seminar
© The Mother Earth News, 1980
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