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Originally posted by notonsamepage
reply to post by boncho
yeah, and reality has been broken down and looked up on many times before
Originally posted by Feltrick
I think it's really neat to have cars running on water. No more dependence on oil and less pollution. But, and there's always a but, what are we supposed to drink? If cars that run on water become all the rage, won't this create a water shortage? Seems the bio fuel industry created a food shortage, in that, food was going towards creating fuel for cars vice feeding the masses.
Also, is this the reason for T. Boon Pickens buying up the water rights in Texas?
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.
Originally posted by boondock-saint
Henry Ford's Model A was originally designed
to run on water/steam. But Ford couldn't
get his invention off the ground due to a lack
of working capital.
His investors would only invest in
a vehicle which had a power supply
that they could control.
Hence the water/steam engine was scrapped
for the gasoline version. And we have been hooked
on gasoline ever since.
Originally posted by TiM3LoRd
Originally posted by pez1975
the company is out of bussiness and was a hoax read more here
www.greenoptimistic.com...
Hold your horses there..IF you actually read the article you linked to it says
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.
Nice of you to try and spread some disinfo there. Your ID had been noted. So many shills so few........
1
It is actually possible to make a car look like it runs on water without breaking the first law of thermodynamics. The way it's usually done is with metal hydrides. These react with water to produce hydrogen, which is then used to power the car.
But since these hydrides will deplete with time, they need to be replaced and so they are actually the fuel, not the water. And you can be sure that more energy will go into producing them than will be taken out, making them an energy carrier, just like a battery.
Originally posted by playswithmachines
reply to post by boncho
Hi dude, prefer the old avatar.
You have a point, the hydrogen catalyst fuel cell is not easy to make & was too expensive to become viable, like BMW's H-cell car.
It's a shame, because the Stan Meyer system is far better, but no-one really wants to discuss it.
Come to think of it, i remember a story about a Japanese company that wanted to market a PMM (Permanent Magnet Motor) and were stopped by the Yakuza (Japanese maffia).
So, any substance behind these rumours, do you think?