Stop paying for energy when you can create your own


Run Your Car On Water - Myth Or Magic?

View PDF | Print View
by: LesaCrosby | Total views: 134 | Word Count: 562

Based on evidence that you can run your car on water, alternative fuel experts are gearing up for an explosion of scientific research. No one wants to put the brakes on the merits of using water as a fuel source.

Public demand for fossil fuel alternatives and environmentally safe products are the driving force behind the water-as-fuel research. Americans consume one quarter of the world's fuel supply, yet only 4% of the world's population lives here. Think of it as an Olympic-sized pool filled with oil being drained once every 15 seconds. We love our cars but hate the price of gas and what it's doing to our planet.

Our desperation to replace oil and gas as our primary fuel is something that internet prowlers feed into. There are many water/hydrogen conversion products on the web claiming to be easy to install and cheap to buy, preying on your desire to save money on gas. Some websites urge you to disregard the chatter from the big oil barons as they're trying to hush up any new technologies. With the flow of information relatively untapped these days, it would be quite hard to squash that type of information.

Water has always been considered a valuable commodity. Ever since Stan Myer ran his dune buggy from the west to east coast almost 30 years ago, using only 22 gallons of water converted into hydrogen, opportunists have been capitalizing on the technology.

Since that time, videos of Myer have been used to give credibility to weak products on the internet. One sales pitch claimed that your vehicle could be converted in just 40 minutes by your neighborhood mechanic for around $120.

There is some merit to Myer's technology. It's based on oxyhydrogen technology, which has been in existence since the 1800s. Oxyhydrogen is a mixture of hydrogen and oxygen gases in a two to one ratio used to fuel welding torches. However, there are an equal number of reports stating that running your car on water is a total scam, as a hydrogen water cell run by a car battery would produce nothing more than bubbles; certainly not powerful enough to turn over a car engine.

Yes, Myer patented his hydrogen fuel cell and clearly had success with it before his untimely death. Inventors have used electricity and even radio waves to convert water into hydrogen and oxygen, using the applications to drive small engines.

If any type of water is going to make a splash on the alternative fuel scene, it just may be water from the ocean. The effect of radio waves when exposed to salt water, created tremendous energy in an experiment conducted by John Kanzius of Pennsylvania. He was looking for a cure for cancer when he discovered that breaking the bond of hydrogen and oxygen in sea water created a white hot flame. Energy unleashed!

Kanzius showed his findings to scientists in Ohio, who were initially skeptical but eventually fascinated by what the Pennsylvania man had stumbled upon. The energy of the radio waves releases the hydrogen/oxygen bond, breaking it down. In addition for being a way to desalinate sea water, the energy generated could eventually power a car.

The great American inventor, anxiously looking for a way to improve our quality of life finds amazing secret - it's a classic story.

As the world searches for new ways to go "green", we might end up just being all "wet"!


About the Author

This system boasts that they can show you how to take a fuel cell and attach it to your car's electrical system. Can You Really Run Your Car On Water First will be the scammer who knows the offer they are making isn't real, they will only lie about it. Perhaps one day we can all be driving a vehicle that is run on HHO gas and gasoline together.


Rating: Not yet rated
Login to vote

Comments

No comments posted.

Add Comment

You do not have permission to comment. If you log in, you may be able to comment.

Members

Add to FaceBook
Stumble It


News



Great Friends