Wednesday, May 4, 2022

This is the brain of the car




 
Every modern vehicle made since 1996 has an electronic control unit (ECU). This is the brain of the car. It monitors the performance of the car, the optimization of the engine, and other meaningful data.

You plug Effuel into your car’s ECU via your OBDII port. This is a port many people don’t realize they have on their vehicle. However, every vehicle sold in Europe or the United States since 1996 has one.

In most vehicles, the OBDII is to the lower right or upper left of the steering wheel. It may be covered, but you can easily remove the cover to install Effuel or other OBDII performance chips onto your vehicle.



After plugging Effuel into your car’s OBDII port, it quietly collects data over the next 150 miles. After those 150 miles, Effuel has enough data to begin tuning your car’s computer for lower fuel consumption.

Sure, you could make expensive modifications to your car to improve fuel efficiency. You could also change your driving habits or adjust your commute. However, Effuel claims to significantly boost efficiency with no changes to your driving habits or vehicle: install the chip and enjoy lower gas.

P.S. Effuel’s sales page is filled with stories of customers who have significantly improved their gas mileage after installing Effuel.













 
species develop today. This symbiotic relationship, with a hypothetical wasp bearing pollen from one plant to another much the way fig wasps do today, could have eventually resulted in both the plant(s) and their partners developing a high degree of specialization. Island genetics is believed to be a common source of speciation, especially when it comes to radical adaptations which seem to have required inferior transitional forms. Note that the wasp example is not incidental; bees, apparently evolved specifically for symbiotic plant relationships, are descended from wasps. Likewise, most fruit used in plant reproduction comes from the enlargement of parts of the flower. This fruit is frequently a tool which depends upon animals wishing to eat it, and thus scattering the seeds it contains. While many such symbiotic relationships remain too fragile to survive competition with mainland organisms, flowers proved to be an unusually effective means of production, spreading (whatever their actual origin









 

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