the process is pretty simple. i made a small fuel cell in my garage in the spring intending to put it in my jeep to make a hho/gas hybrid.. theres a handful of people hwo have done it and got awesome results
But fo serious, the whole deal is pretty shady with how many of these alternative-fuel vehicles either get snuffed mid-production or are blacklisted in such a manner as to be useless.
Electrolysis, chemistry 101. using an electric charge to seperate the hydrogen and oxygen is simple, hell anyone could do it with a car battery and about 10 bucks worth the stuff from Home Depot.
The fusion reaction that produces water from its base elements though is quite active. In fact liquid fuel rockets just like the Saturn V ("Apollo") use this reaction as their main source of thrust. The liquid fuel is liquid oxygen and it combines with hydrogen, synthesis reaction, lots of heat, squeezed through little opening, lots of pressure yadadada.
Which is what makes that cutting torch pretty cool. It's basically a little mini rocket engine that you can hold and melt things with. Like the video said, it's goal was to replace the use of acetylene, which would be a good possibility and quite a cool invention.
As for the cars, people have talked about that idea for a long time now. It's very efficient too because you start with water, seperate it through electrolysis, recombine it which "produces" energy, and then the exhaust is water so it can be captured and repeated so on and so forth.
There are a couple things that i have questions about though. The Law of Conservation of Energy. Energy, like mass, cannot be created or destroyed. It can be broken down, dispersed, etc. but it cannot dissapear. Therefore you would need an equal amount of energy(electricity) for electrolysis of liquid water to hydrogen and oxygen gas and in turn when combined they could only exert so much energy. The car would need a massive electrical supply. Either batteries similar to an electric car or some kind of generator/alternator built around the motor.
It's a very very very cool premise though, i would like too see how far it can go.
Also what is HHO?? their "lingo" is flawed. Fusion Reaction like that in rockets produce H2O2 or hydrogen peroxide. HHO is the same thing as H20, just written incorrectly.
No worries, I'm not actually back, I'm just reminiscing about the old days.
ForSure Motorsports
Win or Lose, We Booze.
Vice President of Internal Affairs at Dirty Donny's House of Hookers
There are a couple things that i have questions about though. The Law of Conservation of Energy. Energy, like mass, cannot be created or destroyed. It can be broken down, dispersed, etc. but it cannot dissapear.
ding ding ding!
i tried working with my professor on this once. he laughed in my face lololol.
i didnt know he was one of the head engineers that worked on the ev1 project..... gm fired him, and told him not to speak of it.
now thats a good cover up that would blow your minds
Originally posted by Ktmracer419
some people choose video games
some choose projects
some choose welding random things together
i didnt know he was one of the head engineers that worked on the ev1 project..... gm fired him, and told him not to speak of it.
now thats a good cover up that would blow your minds
That's one hell of an interesting story if you read up on it.
i tried working with my professor on this once. he laughed in my face
But what if you added something to mix......
That torch will work and does work, because the energy is being released through the tip and transfering to another object.
BUT.... lets say you add a small radioactive/nuclear core.
Change the water for the core every couple months, but a very small nuclear fuel rod could provide enough energy for a single vehicle for hundreds of thousands of miles.
Only downside is cost, risk, disposal, environmental, etc etc etc
basically turd for consumer vehicle use....
But for space flight, now we're talking......
And then time travel, don't even get me started.
No worries, I'm not actually back, I'm just reminiscing about the old days.
ForSure Motorsports
Win or Lose, We Booze.
Vice President of Internal Affairs at Dirty Donny's House of Hookers
BUT.... lets say you add a small radioactive/nuclear core.
Change the water for the core every couple months, but a very small nuclear fuel rod could provide enough energy for a single vehicle for hundreds of thousands of miles.
Only downside is cost, risk, disposal, environmental, etc etc etc
Now you're talking steam so you need a turbine for one, a way to recover the water (condenser) at atmospheric pressure unless you pull vacuum on it, plus since the water in direct contact with a nuclear fuel rod (3-5% weapons grade U235) its radioactive waste. You need a way to control fission and after all that you're still looking at under 40% efficiency for some of the highest efficiency steam plants. Oh you have to renew the fuel every 18ish months.
I don't always drink orange juice, but when I do, I prefer to chew it. #madpulp
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