Actually...it's really a simple setup...but allows a gain of around 10% in MPG.
Also there is likely a gain in "power", though I haven't really tested this....except that I noticed a very good level of power on a 50F day with this setup & advanced ignition.
Cons: on an +85F day I get a dieseling effect where the engine will spin backwards when shut off.
I have noticed some hard starting after the car sits overnight.
Also, in city driving on a hot day...the fuel temps will get into the upper range and stay there....causing the engine to run "hot"...not by the temp gauge though.
Possible that various parts in the the carb will have a shorter life if the fuel is heated.
With my change to NGK plugs I expect some of these effects to be reduced.
Here is a pic:

This is 1/4" diameter soft copper tubing that is wrapped around the upper radiator hose about 8 times. I wrapped this line around something that was close to the diameter of the rad hose first...and then put it on the rad hose.
** the coil on the right is from a previous attempt at using heated water injection...worked but at a cost in "power" with no discernable mileage gain.
The line nearest the camera is coming from the fuel pump and the line in the background is going to the carb. The line to the carb was routed right above the heat shield under the carb in order to pickup some heat from the exhaust manifold.
The coil and the RUBBER line going to the carb need to be insulated...the best material being the foam/alum tape that is sold in hardware stores? Maybe fiberglass tape would work too.
This set up gives the following gas temps:
Used an in/out thermometer on the copper gas line around 6" before it enters carb:
<span style='color:blue'>* ambient temp = 80F</span>
* within 1 mile from cold start = 93F
* 129F to 132F on back roads
* sit 10 minutes = 143F and falling
* drive 1/2 mile = peaks at 147F...then drops
* 55 MPH highway cruise = 124F - 127F
So the faster you drive, the lower the fuel temps.
Have not driven this setup in winter...I WILL have to insulate the gas line going to the carb from the coil and also partially block the radiator to keep the coolant flowing thru the top rad hose.
* Have partially blocked the rad using some light sheet metal sprung between the ledges top and bottom at the back of the rad...plus some fiberglass insulation behind this to block the flow...and a coat hanger "security" wire across the sheetmetal to help hold it. Have about 1/2 the rad blocked...with most of the opening where the fan is and on the pass side. Above 50F, the fan will run some unless I run the heater on the second notch. Fuel temps were around 85-95F at highway speeds on a 35-40F day.
<span style='color:red'>Cautions about this installation:</span>
The heated coil is spliced into the line going from the fuel pump to the carb.
You need to watch the routing of ALL lines to avoid chafing and you need to use the copper line until you get to the back of the carb and away from the serious heat sources. Use ONLY rubber hose made for gas and new ss clamps. Tie the lines down at various places to avoid vibration and chafing.
I would use all new rubber hose.
Do I recommend setting this up? NO. This is just info that CAN be used by someone interested in this sort of thing....you DO have to pay attention to what you are doing...it is experimental in nature.
You DO NOT play with gasoline...it will burn you.
Due to there being no device to control the gas temps....if this was setup in the northern US-Canada it might be best to use 9-10 coils...in the southern US maybe 6-7 or so.
<span style='color:blue'>Postscript and addenum: after adding insulation for winter driving and where gas temps increased by 5 to 10F on an 85F day....con symptoms noted above were more or less absent...likely due to the NGK plugs. The Bosch plats run too hot.</span>
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Heated fuel results over winter:
* I had the radiator partially blocked in order to keep the coolant circulating thru the radiator during cold weather. The elect fan tended to run part of the time when temps got above 50F.
* I had no noticable mileage gain during this winter vs previous winters WITHOUT a blocked radiator and using heated fuel.
* Conclusion...not worth messing with.
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...added a bypass valve to heated fuel line...and did a power test:
* on a 60F day (ambient)...(2) 30 to 55 MPH tests show that it takes 8% LESS time to reach this speed in 5th gear with heated fuel.
no heat = 27.7 secs
heat = 26.4 secs
Fuel temp during this test was 123-124F....radiator was partially blocked.
During warmer weather I would expect the fuel temps to be adjusted to peak at around 150F....maybe the minumum at 55 MPH cruise would be around 130-135F.
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Newer heated fuel method:
* using a length of copper pipe the same OD as the ID for the top rad hose...wrap about 12-15 wraps of 1/4" copper tubing tightly around this and solder it to this pipe section...then insert it in the top rad hose using ss clamps.
* install (2) brass tees and a needle valve into the gas line running from the fuel pump to the carb....so that if the valve is open...most of the fuel goes directly to the carb and is not heated. If the valve is closed...all of the fuel is forced thru the coil and is heated. If the valve is somewhere in between open and closed...the fuel temps are regulated. Use a low flow fine adjsuting needle valve rated for 200F temps.
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