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2007-02-24 13:01:52 · 4 answers · asked by answer man 3 in Science & Mathematics Engineering

http://www.onethirdoftheholocaust.com/mov_pages/04_mov.html

2007-02-24 13:05:47 · update #1

No I'm not trying to kill myself. I am trying to determine if they are telling the truth in the video One Third of the Holocaust http://www.onethirdoftheholocaust.com/

2007-02-24 13:10:04 · update #2

4 answers

It must be a long time. I worked underground in tunnels for thirty or forty years using diesel operated equipment and I'm not dead yet.

Diesel equipment is permitted for use in tunnels but gasoline engines are not. This is what I think makes the holocaust stories questionable. The Germans must have known that a gasoline engine is a more efficient killer than a diesel so why didn"t they use an automobile???????????

2007-02-26 07:02:44 · answer #1 · answered by bignose68 4 · 2 1

It would depend on how much carbon monoxide the engine was producing (i.e. engine displacement and speed) and the volume of space being filled in order to determine how quickly the ratio of CO to O2 had reached toxic levels.

Without knowing those details there is no way to tell you. If you were outdoors (in a low lying area) it would take a while, if you were sucking on the tailpipe, pretty quick.

2007-02-24 21:20:53 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

you need to know the volume of undisplaced oxygen and the volume of CO produced by the engine.. Since the Nazi solution was to pack bodies in tightly, it would take far less time to kill everyone involved.

2007-02-24 21:57:57 · answer #3 · answered by Jason W-S 4 · 1 1

why u want to know don t do anyhting silly life s too too precious

2007-02-24 21:07:06 · answer #4 · answered by harcourt35 2 · 0 1

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