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FTC IS A PERMENANT ONE-TIME TREATMENT
YOU CAN USE FTC IN ANY AGE PETROL OR DIESEL VEHICLE

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Tin-antimony alloy keeps petrol & diesel engines permanently clean and efficient - that's why the manufacturers don't use it 

In 1942, the American motor industry discovered the tin-antimony alloy pellets, used in the fuel tanks of Hurricane fighter planes on the Russian front, caused petrol & diesel fuel to act as a self-cleaner as it combusted. Removing carbon deposits and keeping any engine permanently clean & efficient. They were very worried. If the truth of this discovery was known it could devastate the profits from spare parts, expensive repairs and annual engine de-cokes. But for the fuel additive companies the news was disastrous! So, they started a smear campaign. And motoring's biggest lie was born. 

With help from well-placed friends, negative rumours and misleading press engulfed the little pellets. Along with snake oil slurs and stories of exploding engines the rather plausible sounding, 'if they were that good the manufacturers would fit them' was circulated through garages and dealer networks. It didn't take long before ordinary motorists were doing the industry's dirty work and repeating the lie circulated to fool them! Over the last 80-years, motoring's biggest lie has been repeated so many times, especially in the UK, many have come to believe it.

Avoidable carbon deposits earn billions for the motor industry - but its long been simple to keep petrol & diesel engines permanently clean

The effectiveness of tin-antimony alloy in eliminating deposits from petrol & diesel engines has always been easily measured and observed using industry-standard before & after emissions results. In exactly the same way big-brand chemical fuel detergents are tested. When deposits are removed a measurable reduction in excess exhaust emissions is seen as the engine becomes progressively cleaner. Along with before & after emissions results and MOT emissions certification, FTC has also been independently verified using PEMS (portable emissions measurement system) the advanced real-world measurement technology.

Tin-antimony alloy catalysts were first used commercially in the 1960s in South Africa, to keep the engines in the heavy underground mining equipment belonging to the Anglo American Mining Company, permanently clean. They were so successful they were then used in the container ships owned by the South African Marine Corporation, to extend service intervals, reduce black smoke and prevent fuel wastage. For the last 60-years, tin-antimony alloy has been used by sharp-witted commercial and domestic vehicle owners all over the world. Whether old or new, petrol or diesel, FTC tin-antimony catalysts are used and recommended by the savvy owners of every imaginable make, model, type and age of vehicle. 

For the last 60-years, tin-antimony alloy has been used by savvy vehicle owners to prevent and reverse all the problems hidden deposits cause 

Modern vehicles are equipped with engine control units ECU and fuel injection systems. The ECU uses information from an array of engine sensors to deal with the problem’s engine deposits cause. Constantly adjusting and retarding the engines timing to prevent overheating, engine knock and pinking. With the ECU hiding the problems, it’s not surprising that often the first we know of hidden deposits is when dashboard warning lights start flashing, our engine goes into limp mode or another deposit related problem occurs such as a blocked fuel injector/s, misfire/s or sticking valve/s.

As deposits build up on fuel injectors the ECU adjusts the injector pulse width to compensate, keeping the injectors open longer to increase the fuel flow. Over fuelling then increases carbon build-up on intake valves which in turn restricts air flow and prevents the valves from closing/seating properly. Partially burnt fuel vapour then escapes during the compression stroke increasing emissions and becoming carbonised throughout the exhaust system. Leading to fuel-heavy soot formations blocking the EGR, DPF and CAT. Leading to more flashing warning lights, more visits to the garage and more expense for the vehicle’s owner. 

Removing carbon deposits from piston crowns, cylinders and fuel injectors reduces the engines operating temperature and allows the ECU (where applicable) to progressively reset the engine's timing and fuel trim settings. When tin-antimony alloy is placed in the fuel tank of a new vehicle it will stop deposits forming in the first place. Which means performance, economy and emissions will remain largely unchanged.

The permanent solution for petrol & diesel engines

The Handbook of Air Pollution from Internal Combustion Engines confirms the many ways in which carbon deposits affect all internal combustion engines. Detailing loss of power, driveability issues, poor fuel economy and excess exhaust emissions. The Worldwide Fuel Charter clearly states that even the use of high quality fuel leads to deposit formation, affecting performance and leading to increased engine-out emissions. This helps explain why record numbers of relatively young vehicles fail the MOT emissions test every year. Data from the Driver & Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA) confirms 1,273,771 vehicles were taken off the road in 2019/20. With 849,537 petrol engined and 430,527 diesel engined vehicles failing the MOT emissions test due to carbon deposits.

The discovery in 1942, that placing tin-antimony alloy in the fuel tanks of petrol and diesel vehicles permanently eliminated carbon deposits, should have revolutionised motoring. It should have saved drivers a fortune, saved precious resources and prevented the excess traffic pollution that blights the air for millions of people in towns and cities worldwide. Sadly it didn't. Due to the vast profits made from spare parts, repairs and repeat-use chemical additives, the truth was intentionally suppressed. And nothing has changed. Yet, as industry-standard before & after emissions results have always demonstrated, tin-antimony alloy causes petrol and diesel fuels to self-clean as they combust, eliminating carbon deposits and keeping internal combustion engines permanently clean and efficient. 

Tin-antimony alloy eliminates carbon deposits and keeps engines permanently clean and efficient - that's why the manufacturers don't use it

 

“The science behind metallic surface catalysts is very well founded on the established science of surface chemistry. The combination of metals in the catalyst (FTC) is soundly based and allows these metal compositions to initiate and progress the chemical reactions involved. True catalysts take part in these reactions to form intermediary products but are found to be 100% retained at the end. This accounts for the unlimited life of the catalyst (FTC)”.

Dr. Victor Cunningham, Ph.D B.Sc. DLC

 

 

The proven effectiveness of tin-antimony alloy

FTC is a solid phase heterogeneous surface catalyst. Similar to the commercial catalysts used to initiate molecular changes during the production of bio diesel, fertiliser and plastics. Solid phase catalysts are incredibly hard and non-sacrificial which is what gives them a virtually unlimited lifespan. Tin-antimony alloy triggers a reaction in petrol & diesel fuels but is not used up in this reaction. And because FTC pellets don't dissolve, break-down or wear away you only need to add them to your vehicle once.

Tin-antimony alloy catalysts were developed by Russian scientists for use in the fuel tanks of British Hurricanes and their own fighter planes, operating out of Murmansk during the winter of 1941. Low temperature waxing issues with the local aviation fuel meant the Russian planes were restricted to operating below 15,000 ft and the British Hurricanes to under 16,000 ft. Tin-antimony pellets solved the problem and allowed the planes to operate without issues at their usual altitudes of 20,000 ft with exactly the same fuel. The WW2 campaign, code named 'Operation Benedict' is recorded in Hurricanes over Murmansk by John Golley, and in Force Benedict written by Hurricane fighter pilot Eric Carter, who served in Murmansk, and details the wartime use of fuel catalysts and their subsequent post war development.

Hurricanes over Murmansk by John Golley ISBN 1840372982
Force Benedict by Eric Carter ISBN 1444785141

 

• FTC pellets are safe to use with any engine whether old or new
• FTC pellets don't break down, wear out or ever need to be replaced
• FTC pellets are simple to use and they work. Try them for yourself and see