Are Usually Fuel Add-ons Good For Your Personal Fuel Useage?

You can find oil and gas additives advertised in a lot of places, and for sale in many stores. If you have never noticed them, you will realize they all state that they will give your car better gas mileage when you add them to your tank. Some of the products say they are FDA authorized, but this is denied by the FDA.

If the FDA has not approved any of these products, why are they permitted to be for sale on the shelves, and say that they have been approved. What are consumers meant to do, and who are they to believe? If there is no authority that is honest and truthful, then customers are at the mercy of the product makers’ ingenuity. Some of these additives are simply put in the tank as you are filling up with gas, and then you get better mileage, according to the directions. It will take up some of the gas tank so you are going to have a little less gas, but you won’t get better gas mileage.

Some of the ingredients in the additive are generally tin, magnesium, and platinum, which supposedly help clean the deposits on the bottom of the tank. One thing for sure, never use a product that has acetone, because it will break down plastic parts in your fuel system. Some say that a small quantity of acetone won’t hurt, but there is no way to know when you have surpassed this amount. It is pretty risky to try, considering there is no evidence that the

Are Usually Fuel Add-ons Good For Your Personal Fuel Useage?