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Originally posted by soleprobe
Originally posted by ELahrairah
If you are so wise then please explain your knowledge
Just about everyone here on ATS (except for the very rare neutral observer who has never been exposed to the voluminous amounts of information disclosed on the Internet) has the knowledge with regards to the suppression of hydrogen as a fuel. There is nothing more I can say to add to this knowledge here on ATS and there’s nothing more you can say to cover it up. This thread and many threads like it merely serve to demonstrate the methods used by TPTB to cover-up what has already been exposed.
Carry on….
At the time, they said that we were "3 to 5 years away" from running around in hydrogen powered cars derived from water and would be completely independent of oil.
Probably the most common future technology never invented is the flying car. Appearing in countless science fiction movies and soaring through the day dreams of any commuter stuck in daily bumper to bumper traffic, the flying car represents a human fantasy that hasn’t yet taken off. This is not to say that there haven’t been plenty attempts at a functional model. From the winged Pinto of 1973 (which led to the fiery death of the two pilots) to the more recent “Moller SkyCar,” the world has been searching for a cost effective way at personal air travel for decades.
Inspired by our enduring desire to create convenience through technology, the Corner Grocermat was a prediction of a drive through supermarket made in 1959. Published in the “Closer Than We Think” section of the Chicago Tribune, the paper stated that soon, the grocermat will, “…enable the housewife to drive around an oval arrangement of such preloaded display sections and pick out what was needed.
www.manolith.com...
From the set of Hollywood flicks to demonstrations at Tomorrowland (Disney Land/World), personal jet packs have been talked about since the day the first flying car was dreamed up. For decades it has been thought that everyone – from military soldiers to Joe Sixpack – would be riding in style with a sweet jet pack strapped to their back. The first actual jet packs are said to have been manufactured by the German army during World War II.
Originally posted by soleprobe
Originally posted by ELahrairah
If you are so wise then please explain your knowledge
Just about everyone here on ATS (except for the very rare neutral observer who has never been exposed to the voluminous amounts of information disclosed on the Internet) has the knowledge with regards to the suppression of hydrogen as a fuel. There is nothing more I can say to add to this knowledge here on ATS and there’s nothing more you can say to cover it up. This thread and many threads like it merely serve to demonstrate the methods used by TPTB to cover-up what has already been exposed.
Carry on….
Genepax Water Energy System
In June 2008, Japanese company Genepax unveiled a car which it claims runs on only water and air,[22] and many news outlets dubbed the vehicle a "water-fuel car".[23] The company says it "cannot [reveal] the core part of this invention,” yet,[24] but it has disclosed that the system uses an onboard energy generator (a "membrane electrode assembly") to extract the hydrogen using a "mechanism which is similar to the method in which hydrogen is produced by a reaction of metal hydride and water".[25] The hydrogen is then used to generate energy to run the car. This has led to speculation that the metal hydride is consumed in the process and is the ultimate source of the car's energy, making the car a hydride-fuelled "hydrogen on demand" vehicle, rather than water-fuelled as claimed.[26][27][28] On the company's website the energy source is explained only with the words "Chemical reaction".[29] The science and technology magazine Popular Mechanics has described Genepax's claims as "Rubbish."[30] The vehicle that Genepax demonstrated to the press in 2008 was a REVAi electric car, manufactured in India and sold in the UK as the G-Wiz.
In early 2009, Genepax announced they were closing their website, citing large development costs.
Originally posted by pez1975
the company is out of bussiness and was a hoax read more here
www.greenoptimistic.com...
I don’t know for sure this wasn’t a hoax, but with so many public appearances and demonstrations, I don’t see many possibilities that it was. More, so many discussion groups over the internet experiment water splitting devices, with no intention of selling them to anyone, but to make their lifes better and save their pockets’ contents.
Originally posted by Feltrick
reply to post by Praetorius
So there you go, T. Boone buys water rights because we are running out of clean water to drink and then we build machines that run off of water. Uh, seriously, can't we come up with some transportation technology that doesn't run on something we need to survive?
Solar, I believe, is our best bet. If we continue to find more and more ways to either use or pollute our water supply, we will eventually kill ourselves off and won't need to worry about TPTB doing it for us.
reply to post by ELahrairah
Genepax Water Energy System
In June 2008, Japanese company Genepax unveiled a car which it claims runs on only water and air,[22] and many news outlets dubbed the vehicle a "water-fuel car".[23] The company says it "cannot [reveal] the core part of this invention,” yet,[24] but it has disclosed that the system uses an onboard energy generator (a "membrane electrode assembly") to extract the hydrogen using a "mechanism which is similar to the method in which hydrogen is produced by a reaction of metal hydride and water".[25] The hydrogen is then used to generate energy to run the car. This has led to speculation that the metal hydride is consumed in the process and is the ultimate source of the car's energy, making the car a hydride-fuelled "hydrogen on demand" vehicle, rather than water-fuelled as claimed.[26][27][28] On the company's website the energy source is explained only with the words "Chemical reaction".[29] The science and technology magazine Popular Mechanics has described Genepax's claims as "Rubbish."[30] The vehicle that Genepax demonstrated to the press in 2008 was a REVAi electric car, manufactured in India and sold in the UK as the G-Wiz.
In early 2009, Genepax announced they were closing their website, citing large development costs.[3
Originally posted by soleprobe
That car's been on youtube for 2 years now.... and it certainly is a threat to big oil and they would stop at nothing to keep the information about this technology from going viral
www.youtube.com...