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Super fuel max
Submitted: Wednesday, Feb 02, 2005 at 16:53
Skiddy
Gday , all
Has anybody ever seen this product and do they know if it actually
works or is it just a gimmick.
Thanks
http://www.superfuelmax.com.au/
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AnswerID: 96286 Submitted: Wednesday, Feb 02, 2005 at 17:01
David Au
replied: It is totally and completely fraudulent in every way.
Don't you just love these trash that try and sell these fraudulent no work rip-off devices.
http://www.consumeraffairs.com/news04/fuelmax.html
November 4, 2004
The Federal Trade Commission has asked a U.S. district court judge to shut down an operation that used illegal spam to make deceptive claims about an "automotive fuel saver" that doesn't save fuel.
The FTC charges that the spam violates the CAN-SPAM Act and the deceptive claims violate the FTC Act. The agency will ask the court to permanently bar the law violations and order the defendants to provide redress for consumers.
An FTC complaint filed in U.S. District Court in Chicago alleges that International Research and Development Corporation manufactures and markets a "magnetic device" under the names FuelMAX and Super FuelMAX. The company claims that when the device is attached to an automobile's fuel line, it will fracture gasoline hydrocarbon chains through magnetic resonance and:
• Increase mileage by up to 27%;
• Reduce Fuel Consumption;
• Reduce Emissions;
• Provide Accelerated Combustion; and
• Burn Fuel That is Normally Exhausted as Un-burned Pollution.
In November 2001, the FTC issued a warning that these product claims and advertising were false, lacked substantiation, and likely violated the FTC Act.
Other defendants, acting as Super FuelMAX resellers, set up Web sites, including www.fuelsaverpro.com to sell the magnetic devices under the pseudonym Fuel Saver Pro. The Web sites made claims such as:
• Increase gas mileage 27%+ by helping fuel burn better;
• Reduce emissions by 43%;
• Smoother engine;
• pays for itself FAST!!!!
• Gives an extra 10% more horsepower; and
• Based on the size of your gas tank you will save from $8 for a typical 15-gallon gas tank, but larger V8 SUVs and trucks will save up to $20 per tank.
The defendant resellers used spam that made deceptive claims to drive traffic to their Web sites. According to the FTC, the spam contained the names of innocent third parties in the "from" or "reply to" fields - a practice known as spoofing - and did not contain a valid physical postal address.
The FTC alleges that the magnetic "fuel saver" doesn't save fuel, doesn't increase gas mileage, and doesn't reduce emissions. According to the complaint, the claims are false and misleading and violate the FTC Act.
The agency also alleges that by providing promotional materials with the false claims to distributors, resellers, and affiliates, the defendants have provided them with the means and instrumentalities to violate the FTC Act. The agency also alleges that the spoofing and failure to provide a valid physical postal address violate the CAN-SPAM Act.
The FTC charges that consumers throughout the country have suffered substantial monetary loss and the defendants have been unjustly enriched. It has asked the court to halt the deceptive claims, bar future violations of the CAN-SPAM Act, and order redress for consumers.
The FTC's complaint names International Research and Development Corporation of Nevada; Anthony Renda; Net Marketing Group, LLC; Micro System Technologies; Floyd J. Tassin, Jr; Marcia Tassin; Diverse Marketing Group, Inc.; Diverse Marketing Group, LLC; Mark C. Ayoub; and Epro2000, Inc. as defendants
Reply 1 of 5
AnswerID: 96289 Submitted: Wednesday, Feb 02, 2005 at 17:06
Member - Davoe (WA)
replied: work best in conjunction with a hi clone seriosly though are you serios. Did you look at the other crap they were selling? the fact that you even asked the question makes me relize why they get sold - some people will believe it.
about as genuine as the tv ads telling you there really are girls just like you waiting to take your calls at the telecafe at 3:30am on a tuesday night
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You dont need to leave Perth to go bush
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Reply 2 of 5
AnswerID: 96303 Submitted: Wednesday, Feb 02, 2005 at 18:35
Member - Blue (VIC)
replied: Also from this site... "Do you still use toilet paper after relieving nature? "
Clean Bidet????? What will they think of next? Imagine the mess you'd come home to after the kids discovered there is a water pistol in the dunny...
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Puritanism: The haunting fear that someone, somewhere may be happy.
Member: Lapsed Membership
Reply 3 of 5
FollowupID: 355084 Submitted: Wednesday, Feb 02, 2005 at 19:34
member-Diamond(vic) posted:
geez id love to see that bidet thing work after one of my bourbon sesions.
FollowUp 1 of 2
FollowupID: 355105 Submitted: Wednesday, Feb 02, 2005 at 21:59
Member - Blue (VIC) posted:
Perhaps we could buy one each and "cross swords"
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Puritanism: The haunting fear that someone, somewhere may be happy.
Member: Lapsed Membership
FollowUp 2 of 2
AnswerID: 96318 Submitted: Wednesday, Feb 02, 2005 at 19:53
Skiddy
replied: Thanks for the reply everyone, I didnt look at the website myself. A friend at work asked about it he saw it in a campervan magazine and I knew this would be the best place to get some info, Its the old saying if it looks to good to be true it most likely is. thanks again
Reply 4 of 5
FollowupID: 355094 Submitted: Wednesday, Feb 02, 2005 at 20:55
David Au posted:
Yip the campervan magazine was the CMCA magazine "The Wanderer". I was disgusted they even accepted such a fraudulent advert for print. The whole advert was completely fraudulent.
FollowUp 1 of 1
AnswerID: 96345 Submitted: Wednesday, Feb 02, 2005 at 21:26
ianmc
replied: Sounds like something similar to what I foolishly fell for in the quest for the holy grail of diesel efficiency. CVonsisted of two small & fairly strong magnets, one on each side of fuel line encased in a two piece plastic block, costs about $100 I think & worth about $10-
Does it work? Dunno, but my ute goes well anyway!
Reply 5 of 5
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