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#21
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Strap one around your privates. You will not believe the improvement in
performance! "happy-go-lucky" wrote in message ... On Tue, 26 Dec 2006 16:22:08 GMT, "L Ron Hubbub" wrote: http://www.harborfreightusa.com/usa/...o?itemid=36098 Be sure to read the product manual! Its a real joke - 'magnetic circuitry' indeed. And of course one or more of you knuckleheads out there reading this will swear you are getting great fuel milege because you too have a magnet strapped to your fuel line...... I use two of these...one on the fuel line right after the gas tank, and the other up closer to the engine. I have seen about a 15% increase in fuel mileage. At first, I didn't think it was working too well until one of the guys at my local Harbor Freight store who works on cars told me to make sure they are both installed with the same magnetic polarity. Sure enough, he was right. Car manufacturers could put these on their vehicles, but don't to save on production costs. The "Tornado" is another item that is worth its weight in gold. So the joke is on you, L Ron. These things really do work. |
#22
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![]() "Beech Creek" wrote in message om... Strap one around your privates. You will not believe the improvement in performance! LOL.......... Believe it or not - someone probably has already thought of trying it OR done it. Some guys (and gals) will try "anything" to make life interesting. NOTHING surprises me anymore - but it sure makes for some good reading! Next case please? |
#23
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![]() "L Ron Hubbub" wrote in message . net... http://www.harborfreightusa.com/usa/...o?itemid=36098 Be sure to read the product manual! Its a real joke - 'magnetic circuitry' indeed. Quite similar to the steam boiler scale control products. I had on guy come around with a thing you clamped around the feedwater pipe going into the boiler. He claimed it was ultrasound or something like that. I asked him if he would replace a $80,000.00 boiler if it was damaged from scale buildup and he left. Obviously he did not believe in his own product. And of course one or more of you knuckleheads out there reading this will swear you are getting great fuel milege because you too have a magnet strapped to your fuel line...... |
#24
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![]() "Beech Creek" wrote in message om... Strap one around your privates. You will not believe the improvement in performance! Insertion might be a bit difficult. "happy-go-lucky" wrote in message ... On Tue, 26 Dec 2006 16:22:08 GMT, "L Ron Hubbub" wrote: http://www.harborfreightusa.com/usa/...do?itemid=3609 8 Be sure to read the product manual! Its a real joke - 'magnetic circuitry' indeed. And of course one or more of you knuckleheads out there reading this will swear you are getting great fuel milege because you too have a magnet strapped to your fuel line...... I use two of these...one on the fuel line right after the gas tank, and the other up closer to the engine. I have seen about a 15% increase in fuel mileage. At first, I didn't think it was working too well until one of the guys at my local Harbor Freight store who works on cars told me to make sure they are both installed with the same magnetic polarity. Sure enough, he was right. Car manufacturers could put these on their vehicles, but don't to save on production costs. The "Tornado" is another item that is worth its weight in gold. So the joke is on you, L Ron. These things really do work. |
#25
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nonoise wrote:
[snip] There are, sad to say, cases where ad hominem attacks are warranted, and this is one of them. The original post is off-topic, but that's a minor offense on Usenet. However, the claims _ARE_ laughable, and anyone who champions such nonsense deserves to be offered a discount on a bridge: if nothing else, it's a chastening reminder that, in the future, those who were disposed to believe them should drop a gold brick on the ground before negotiating a purchase. William William, I was with you until this paragraph. Even the most laughable claims, in my opinion, warrant one of two reactions online: Ignore them, or explain, using facts and not just assertions, why you believe them to be nonsensel. I disagree that ad hominem attacks are EVER appropriate in response to a claim concerning UFOs, fuel line magnets, political conspiracies--you name it. My usual response is to roll my eyes and move on. The only reason I posted this time was because the issue has been researched by responsible parties and I thought it might be worthwhile to make that known. Why bother with personal attacks? The faceless, no-consequences Internet makes that too easy as it is. No way do I believe that some of the meanspirited garbage that stains too many NGs (spend 15 minutes on antiques radio/phono or shortwave) would come from somebody's mouth in a real conversation, even one conducted over the phone and not in person. |
#26
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"shark45" wrote in message
news ![]() "Beech Creek" wrote in message om... Strap one around your privates. You will not believe the improvement in performance! Insertion might be a bit difficult. That too - hasn't stopped some from "trying". When I was doing a stint as a medic, I heard a doctor talking about a patient who had a "light bulb" of the conventional type - "attempted" to be stuck up his anal cavity in a feat of sexual pleasure - and it "busted" leaving shards of glass up in the rectum. People do the weirdest things. As I said in a previous post - "nothing" surprises me - but it sure makes for some interesting reading. |
#27
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Avery W3AVE wrote:
nonoise wrote: [snip] There are, sad to say, cases where ad hominem attacks are warranted, and this is one of them. [snip] William William, I was with you until this paragraph. Even the most laughable claims, in my opinion, warrant one of two reactions online: Ignore them, or explain, using facts and not just assertions, why you believe them to be nonsensel. I disagree that ad hominem attacks are EVER appropriate in response to a claim concerning UFOs, fuel line magnets, political conspiracies--you name it. My usual response is to roll my eyes and move on. The only reason I posted this time was because the issue has been researched by responsible parties and I thought it might be worthwhile to make that known. Why bother with personal attacks? The faceless, no-consequences Internet makes that too easy as it is. No way do I believe that some of the meanspirited garbage that stains too many NGs (spend 15 minutes on antiques radio/phono or shortwave) would come from somebody's mouth in a real conversation, even one conducted over the phone and not in person. You are correct, in the sense that an "ad hominem" attack is against a person instead of his/her argument: it's a logical fallacy, and should be avoided for that reason. However, as you point out, another poster had already refuted the claim: I though it obvious that no further evidence was needed. Someone who asserts that the moon is made of green cheese, or that the earth is flat, or that magnets affect gasoline - or that Africans are inferior - should be answered with skepticism. Even the most wild speculation can attain the status of "fact" when enough people believe it: my father was fond of saying "A million Frenchmen can't be wrong", and Joseph McCarthy proved that Americans are never short on gullibility, so I remain convinced that an appeal to preconceived notions, either of racial purity or oil company conspiracies, deserves, if not derision, at least to be received with an extra measure of caution. In other words, the burden of proof is on the claimant: if someone believes that magnets can improve gasoline mileage, let him step up and demonstrate it. If he can't, let him take his lumps. I'm sorry to crabwalk here, but I believe my concerns are real, and I have seen otherwise "normal" people hire "Feng shui" "practitioners" to place magnets in their work cubicle (so as to assure that the stars were in alignment or the worm had turned or the entrails were favorable, or whatever it is that convinces "normal" people to open their wallets). The one constant of the human race is that David Hannum _was_ right: "There's a sucker born every minute". Our history has shown that a million suckers _can_ be wrong, but it also demonstrates, as Galileo would attest, that they can be very vicious when confronted with the newest version of the truth. I know I make your argument for you here, but with a point in mind: those with outlandish ideas had best be ready for a lot of hard stares and possess a lot of hard facts. William P.S. Suggestions as to a more appropriate forum are, of course, welcome. -- A little learning is a dang'rous thing; Drink deep, or taste not the Pierian spring; There shallow draughts intoxicate the brain, And drinking largely sobers us again. -- Alexander Pope, Essay on Criticism |
#28
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![]() nonoise wrote: You are correct, in the sense that an "ad hominem" attack is against a person instead of his/her argument: it's a logical fallacy, and should be avoided for that reason. However, as you point out, another poster had already refuted the claim: I though it obvious that no further evidence was needed. Someone who asserts that the moon is made of green cheese, or that the earth is flat, or that magnets affect gasoline - or that Africans are inferior - should be answered with skepticism. Even the most wild speculation can attain the status of "fact" when enough people believe it: my father was fond of saying "A million Frenchmen can't be wrong", and Joseph McCarthy proved that Americans are never short on gullibility, so I remain convinced that an appeal to preconceived notions, either of racial purity or oil company conspiracies, deserves, if not derision, at least to be received with an extra measure of caution. In other words, the burden of proof is on the claimant: if someone believes that magnets can improve gasoline mileage, let him step up and demonstrate it. If he can't, let him take his lumps. I'm sorry to crabwalk here, but I believe my concerns are real, and I have seen otherwise "normal" people hire "Feng shui" "practitioners" to place magnets in their work cubicle (so as to assure that the stars were in alignment or the worm had turned or the entrails were favorable, or whatever it is that convinces "normal" people to open their wallets). The one constant of the human race is that David Hannum _was_ right: "There's a sucker born every minute". Our history has shown that a million suckers _can_ be wrong, but it also demonstrates, as Galileo would attest, that they can be very vicious when confronted with the newest version of the truth. I know I make your argument for you here, but with a point in mind: those with outlandish ideas had best be ready for a lot of hard stares and possess a lot of hard facts. William P.S. Suggestions as to a more appropriate forum are, of course, welcome. At the risk of repetition and belaboring the obvious, there isn't anything at all in your response with which I disagree. "An extra measure of caution"..."answered with skepticism": exactly. sci.skeptic is one place that someone who is genuinely curious about an improbable claim might find help. It is no place for those who believe regardless of the lack of evidence. |
#29
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Alnico or an electromagnet?
"Beech Creek" wrote in message om... Strap one around your privates. You will not believe the improvement in performance! "happy-go-lucky" wrote in message ... On Tue, 26 Dec 2006 16:22:08 GMT, "L Ron Hubbub" wrote: http://www.harborfreightusa.com/usa/...do?itemid=3609 8 Be sure to read the product manual! Its a real joke - 'magnetic circuitry' indeed. And of course one or more of you knuckleheads out there reading this will swear you are getting great fuel milege because you too have a magnet strapped to your fuel line...... I use two of these...one on the fuel line right after the gas tank, and the other up closer to the engine. I have seen about a 15% increase in fuel mileage. At first, I didn't think it was working too well until one of the guys at my local Harbor Freight store who works on cars told me to make sure they are both installed with the same magnetic polarity. Sure enough, he was right. Car manufacturers could put these on their vehicles, but don't to save on production costs. The "Tornado" is another item that is worth its weight in gold. So the joke is on you, L Ron. These things really do work. |
#30
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No, not "What was being claimed?" but "was that being claimed"
And a number of groups I frequent have the custom of top posting, which in my opinion makes new postings easier to read, without scrolling down. I agree that in some cases of long threads this can be a less advisable idea, Barry. God Bless (couldn't resist it!) G "Barry OGrady" wrote in message ... On Thu, 28 Dec 2006 17:39:55 +1100, "aalaan" wrote: Absolutely. Was that being claimed? That you top post. "cmdr buzz corey" wrote in message roups.com... JOHN D wrote: There are people who believe they've been aboard alien spaceships too. Wonder why it only works on 4 cyl engines? Seems if it works on 4 it should work on 6 and 8 as well. Barry ===== Home page http://members.iinet.net.au/~barry.og |
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