03-22-2021, 02:24 AM
"(Don’t miss the Chemtrails model on their website.)"
In the late 90's I had an '85 Honda CRX that was on the far late side of being in between oil changes. I don't remember why exactly but I bought a can of "oil treatment" thinking I could extend the oil change because I was a renter, owned no tools, and generally didn't have the means to change the oil myself and couldn't easily afford professional help.
I put the mystery can into the crankcase and started up the car. THICK grey smoke came out the tailpipe which normally burned clean. I thought, that was odd, I bet after the engine runs hot whatever was in the additive will burn off and everything will be okay again. The opposite happened. The smoke just got thicker and denser and after a few minutes I couldn't see the houses across the street the smoke was so dense. I clung onto the hope that it would eventually burn away but after a good 15 minutes the engine was hot and I had filled our neighborhood with a smoke so thick I was worried the fire trucks might show up. So I turned it off. Oddly, nobody came out of their homes to ask why my car smoke was blocking out the sun among the other problems all the smoke was creating. But I lived next to a crack house and it wasn't really a "talk to your neighbor" type of community.
A few days later I got paid and drove the car to the nearest 10-minute oil change place, blanketing the road behind me in an oppressively thick smoke screen, worried I would get pulled over the entire time. After the oil change everything returned to normal and I've never poured anything but oil into my crankcase since.
One of those "chemtrail" switches would have been useful that day I drove the car to the oil change place.
About a month later I was selling everything I owned to move to Alaska, including that car. At the moving sale a neighbor I had never met before asked me what I had done to fix the car from filling the entire neighborhood with smoke. I don't know if he believed the additive was responsible, but he didn't make an offer on the car.
In the late 90's I had an '85 Honda CRX that was on the far late side of being in between oil changes. I don't remember why exactly but I bought a can of "oil treatment" thinking I could extend the oil change because I was a renter, owned no tools, and generally didn't have the means to change the oil myself and couldn't easily afford professional help.
I put the mystery can into the crankcase and started up the car. THICK grey smoke came out the tailpipe which normally burned clean. I thought, that was odd, I bet after the engine runs hot whatever was in the additive will burn off and everything will be okay again. The opposite happened. The smoke just got thicker and denser and after a few minutes I couldn't see the houses across the street the smoke was so dense. I clung onto the hope that it would eventually burn away but after a good 15 minutes the engine was hot and I had filled our neighborhood with a smoke so thick I was worried the fire trucks might show up. So I turned it off. Oddly, nobody came out of their homes to ask why my car smoke was blocking out the sun among the other problems all the smoke was creating. But I lived next to a crack house and it wasn't really a "talk to your neighbor" type of community.
A few days later I got paid and drove the car to the nearest 10-minute oil change place, blanketing the road behind me in an oppressively thick smoke screen, worried I would get pulled over the entire time. After the oil change everything returned to normal and I've never poured anything but oil into my crankcase since.
One of those "chemtrail" switches would have been useful that day I drove the car to the oil change place.
About a month later I was selling everything I owned to move to Alaska, including that car. At the moving sale a neighbor I had never met before asked me what I had done to fix the car from filling the entire neighborhood with smoke. I don't know if he believed the additive was responsible, but he didn't make an offer on the car.