This is one of the few places I've seen that mentions methanol at all. Sorry you guys have had odd experiences with it - were you using distilled water or tap water?
Anyhow, the unit available that uses methanol and distilled water together is the "Aquathrust" made by the Aquatune team. I'm running the thrust unit on the RV's 454 although I usually cap the methanol input and just run distilled water. This is their unit that is intended for horsepower increases as opposed to their other products that are focused on MPG. If you count any of your time as money, you should probably consider their products - they come with money back guarantees and 5 year warranties. I own 3 units right now and am installing an AquatunePlus unit on an '03 Acura 3.2L tomorrow.
Even though the thrust unit is for HP, I was steady at 5.25 MPG before and am steady at 8.5 MPG now on the 454(that's like 60% better), although they tell me I can see higher as I've got to get my timing dialed in better (I'm cranked out to 30 degrees right now just seeing how far I can go without predetonation/backfiring/dieseling). ***I should note also, so no one blows their car up with half baked experiments, that all of the aquatune units allow a certain amount of uncracked water into the system for the WWII effect which prevents the predetonation associated with orthohydrogen injection along with a host of other positives already mentioned in this thread..
Also - on alcohol - that's their recomendation too. You run 50/50 in the winter time although it isn't required at all in the summer, and hasn't made any noticeable difference to me except that alcohol costs a little more than distilled water. If anybody's cell is to be a year round solution, you've got to figure this in or make sure your electrolyzer lowers the freezing temperature effectively. Remember that our chemistry teachers used no electrolyzers but used platinum or similar cathode/anode combinations.
On "how much is enough?", if you are making parahydrogen (like with ferrous electrodes) you hit a ceiling pretty quickly. I proved this by purchasing a 200CF tank of hydrogen (compressed hydrogen is always para because it has passed through the liquid state) from the welding shop and feeding various flows and pressures into a 3.0 fuel injected's intake manifold. (the vehicle was running in open loop - no o2 sensor - so the gas/air mixture was a control/constant) By seeping in .2 CF per minute at 5 psi (on the regulator) I got a 50% rise in rpms. By seeping as much as 45 CF per minute at 40 psi I got the exact same result.
Distilled water sermon: I can't stress enough how far behind experimentation is and how inconsistent results are in this arena because folks refuse to go spend 60 cents on a gallon of distilled water... I hear that Sears is selling a distiller... I just cringe every time I see the word tap water in the same paragraph as electrolysis or hydrogen...
Thanks for keeping the good word out ther concerning this type of technolog. For me, I've decided that the 70's are over and I'm latching onto the tried and true stuff and continuing my mods from there. My next experiment will involve the pulse stuff, using high voltage (I'm hoping 10,700Hz/10,700v) to feed the electrolysis unit that is part of the Aquatune Plus unit.
