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6 answers

Older cars would occasionally back fire (Make a loud boom, jolt, somtime shoot out small to large sparks ad smoke, and occasionally crack the muffler) if the car was stopped and started before actually turning all the way off. But new, modern car makers have been making heir best effort to try to stop this. SO, if you ahve an older car, good luck to you, if not, not much you can do.

2006-07-16 13:59:10 · answer #1 · answered by Rachel B 1 · 0 0

Look in your favorite tuner mag and there should be a ad for devices that will do that in the back. Usually they require a spark plug in the exhaust pipe and a way to feed a flammable liquid into the exhaust after the muffler.

2006-07-16 14:14:58 · answer #2 · answered by escaped_mental_case 4 · 0 0

We used to inject gasoline into the exhaust pipe after the muffler. We used a reservoir and pump for windshield washers, wired to a switch on the dash. Worked great till gas ate rubber hoses.
These days you'de probably use niitrous.

2006-07-16 14:01:11 · answer #3 · answered by Don 6 · 0 0

You need to have a way of putting propane in the exhaust pipe.with an ignition source that is constant

2006-07-16 13:57:12 · answer #4 · answered by DECO 1 · 0 0

it has to be a car with a carburetor, and it has to have a spark plug with coil attached to the tail pipe...you need to read old skool rodz for this type of device

2006-07-16 13:56:22 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I wouldn't recommend any way-not unless you have a car like race car that does it when powering up means burning fuel-rocket type that you can see but your car isn't made to handle that and you'll end uplowing yoursel and car up if you atempt to use that fuel.

2006-07-16 13:57:09 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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