911 Intervention, Police/Fire/Ambulance
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RH77 |
I was under the impression you couldn't really do that any more with a modern car in good condition. :confused: One of the ways of the 3-way catalyst is to rid the exhaust of the carbonium monoxodyl.
Still, the neighbours might not know this, so the brigade may show up anyway. I wonder if they'd chase you down the highway while doing tests... |
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I'm still pretty sure that the exhaust byproducts will bind to the body's Oxygen molecules and render the same effects...but I'll have to check on that...not with testing, that's for sure! RH77 |
Still Possible, but would take longer
OK, the advent of the advanced CATs will slow the process, but there is always unburned fuel present which does it.
From the American College of Chest Physicians. If inclosed in a garage, the o2 ratio will cause emission levels to increase because the car is using up the oxygen, so more fuel is added until it stalls -- by that time it's too late. If the car isn't breathing by that point, neither would the victim. RH77 |
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Where is EPA, NHTSA and OSHA on this issue????? |
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;) RH77 |
MetroMPG, from what I've gathered, the appropriate amount of EGR reduces peak flame temperatures/NOx during combustion because it minimizes the amount of oxygen in the combustion chamber, but it has limits because if too much exhaust/heat goes back into the cylinder, the fuel will ignite on it's own after hot spots start to develop. So it's a fine line to walk so to speak, fuel with higher octane allows for more EGR, which reduces pumping losses by a proportional amount while resisting detonation that would happen if gasoline was used.
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I wonder what makes higher cylinder temperatures: lean burn, or high rates of EGR.
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It probably depends in head/cylinder design. I've seen Honda mention swirl during lean burn so they don't get hot spots in the cylinder, and EGR may be able to have the same effect, but in either event, the limiting factor is how much heat can be released in the cylinder before the fuel starts detonating, which should be pretty lose wrt lean burn/EGR in any given engine design.
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RH77 |
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