I need the information where to connect the Hydrogen Gas to the carburetor on what side
Hydrogen is a gas at 20 degrees, Fahrenheit and Celsius, but it you are talking Kelvin, then it is a liquid.
Hydrogen chloride is a compound composed of hydrogen and chlorine atoms bonded together, while hydrogen gas and chlorine gas are pure elements. Hydrogen gas is diatomic, consisting of two hydrogen atoms bonded together, while chlorine gas is diatomic, with two chlorine atoms bonded together. Hydrogen chloride is a colorless gas with a pungent odor, while hydrogen gas is colorless and odorless, and chlorine gas is a yellow-green gas with a strong odor.
At room temperature, hydrogen is a colorless, odorless gas. It is the lightest and most abundant element in the universe. Hydrogen becomes a liquid at very low temperatures, below -252.87 degrees Celsius.
Hydrogen chloride gas is colorless.
Hydrogen peroxide decomposes to hydrogen and oxygen in the gas phase.
no
Float level to HIGH, Needle and seat not installed correct are damaged. Carburetor not CLEANED correct. Fuel pressure to high. That engine should only have 6 to 9 lbs. of fuel pressure.
Yes
Not without listing engine size, year, and what carburetor. Jeep installed many different carburetors over the years.
Having water in the gas tank will work its way up to the carburetor.
Gas is not getting into the carburetor because no Saturn made ever had one.
Vacuum lines installed correctly? Vacuum ports on carb. working?
Yes, injected engines do not use a traditional carburetor. EFI gas engines do not have a carburetor, and diesel engines do not use a carburetor.
There is a fuel pressure sensor on the back of the carburetor for the 1982 Corvette. Normally, there is no fuel shut off switch unless it is installed as an after market part. If the fuel will not shut off normally, replace the fuel pressure sensor behind the carburetor.
YES, I just installed a 20 gallon with in tank pump into my 1990. Good luck with your conversion...Mine is almost wired.
A carburetor regulates the flow of the air/gas mixture into the pistons of a gas engine. They aren't found on cars any longer but do still come into use for smaller gas engines.
When hydrogen gas reacts with fluorine gas, the product formed is hydrogen fluoride (HF) gas.