saturn_boy96
88 C1V1C 53D4N DR1V3R
its probably more expensive to produce.
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Originally posted by saturn_boy96@Oct 5 2003, 09:39 PM
its probably more expensive to produce.
Originally posted by seanjuan@Oct 8 2003, 02:06 PM
it's also good for cooling your intake air
you just have to have an injector setup and some type of controller to spray it under certain conditions
Originally posted by rudeludenotmeanthough+Oct 8 2003, 10:14 PM-->seanjuan@Oct 8 2003, 02:06 PM
it's also good for cooling your intake air
you just have to have an injector setup and some type of controller to spray it under certain conditions
got any proof?
Originally posted by sleepergtx@Oct 8 2003, 05:21 PM
WWII veterans use to do that with their beer.
They would bury the bottle, pour gas on it and light it on fire in the desert, it would cool off the alcohol and make it tastier.
Originally posted by djyox+Oct 9 2003, 01:10 AM-->sleepergtx@Oct 8 2003, 05:21 PM
WWII veterans use to do that with their beer.
They would bury the bottle, pour gas on it and light it on fire in the desert, it would cool off the alcohol and make it tastier.
Huh? I still don't get it, I know that alcohol takes the heat away....but lighting it on fire? doesn't that just redo what the alcohol did in the first place? Please tell me more....
Originally posted by sleepergtx@Oct 8 2003, 09:07 PM
Bury your bottle in the sand, poor gasoline on the sand around the bottle, light the gasoline on fire. When the fire burns, it'll evaporate the gas which uses the heat and oxygen in the sand around the bottle to burn. This in turn will cool the bottle and the liquid inside off considerably.
Originally posted by jiahanhao+Oct 9 2003, 02:13 AM-->sleepergtx@Oct 8 2003, 09:07 PM
Bury your bottle in the sand, poor gasoline on the sand around the bottle, light the gasoline on fire. When the fire burns, it'll evaporate the gas which uses the heat and oxygen in the sand around the bottle to burn. This in turn will cool the bottle and the liquid inside off considerably.
Sleeper, I'm going to have to disagree with you on this one... burning is nothing but rapid oxidation. This means it takes oxygen from the air, and by combining with something combustible produces heat as a product. I think it would heat the beer up... but I'll ask a my physics prof. just to make sure...