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References: [ +subject:/^(?:^\s*(re|sv|fwd|fw)[\[\]\d]*[:>-]+\s*)*moisture\s+in\s+exhaust\s*$/: 8 ]

Total 8 documents matching your query.

1. moisture in exhaust (score: 1)
Author: KEVIN EDDINS <eddinsk@NRISO.NOLA.NAVY.MIL>
Date: Tue, 08 Dec 1998 07:25:29 -0600
I've heard stories like "If waters coming out the exhaust, then you've got a good engine" and "that's perfect combustion there" and "HEY! you got my pants dirty" Does water (lightly) splashing out of
/html/spitfires/1998-12/msg00311.html (7,350 bytes)

2. Re: moisture in exhaust (score: 1)
Author: "Ryan Smith" <shmitty99@hotmail.com>
Date: Tue, 08 Dec 1998 05:49:30 PST
Good or bad I don't know. I do know that water is a normal by product of combustion. Both my spitfire and my explorer have some degree of water in the exhaust. Ryan Smith 72 Emerald Green Spitfire I'
/html/spitfires/1998-12/msg00312.html (7,752 bytes)

3. Re: moisture in exhaust (score: 1)
Author: jak0pab@jak10.med.navy.mil (Bowen, Patrick A. RP2)
Date: Tue, 08 Dec 1998 10:02:40
Kevin, if your car has a catalytic converter then the platinum inside of it creates a chemical reaction that changes the choroflourocarbons and carbonmonoxide gases into H2O that is the water you see
/html/spitfires/1998-12/msg00313.html (8,256 bytes)

4. Re: moisture in exhaust (score: 1)
Author: jak0pab@jak10.med.navy.mil (Bowen, Patrick A. RP2)
Date: Tue, 08 Dec 1998 10:06:21
Ryan, Not really a product of combustion, it is a product of the combustion gases after they pass through a Catalytic converter Patrick Patrick Bowen '79 Spitfire Jacksonville FL
/html/spitfires/1998-12/msg00314.html (8,447 bytes)

5. Re: moisture in exhaust (score: 1)
Author: "Ryan Smith" <shmitty99@hotmail.com>
Date: Tue, 08 Dec 1998 06:45:25 PST
Beg to differ. The combustion of any hydrocarbon (under which gasoline falls) produces serveral things of which include CO, CO2, and H2O all in the vapor phase. The water will then condense on the r
/html/spitfires/1998-12/msg00316.html (8,875 bytes)

6. Re: moisture in exhaust (score: 1)
Author: "James Carpenter" <jc_carpenter@softhome.net>
Date: Tue, 8 Dec 1998 22:15:32 -0000
CFC's are the refrigernts and nothing to do with burning hydrocarbons. No.... Ok petrol is hydrocarbons of different shapes and sizes, hydrocarbons contain carbon and hydrogen. Let's take benzene C6
/html/spitfires/1998-12/msg00388.html (9,151 bytes)

7. Re: moisture in exhaust (score: 1)
Author: "James Carpenter" <jc_carpenter@softhome.net>
Date: Tue, 8 Dec 1998 22:20:06 -0000
Catalytic converter don't produce any water at all. From cat's you get Oxygen, Nitrogen and Carbondioxide. Water is a natural product of combustion Methane + Oxygen gives Carbondioxide and Water CH4
/html/spitfires/1998-12/msg00389.html (9,091 bytes)

8. Re: moisture in exhaust (score: 1)
Author: jak0pab@jak10.med.navy.mil (Bowen, Patrick A. RP2)
Date: Thu, 10 Dec 1998 21:37:59
James, thanks for setting things straight on the chemistry. I do assure you however that you can kill yourself with a catalysed car. Patrick Patrick Bowen '79 Spitfire Jacksonville FL
/html/spitfires/1998-12/msg00397.html (7,463 bytes)


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