Results 21 to 30 of 429
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May 22nd, 2006 07:02 PM #21
Teka....
The new and improved H2O Model 1500 Aquygen™ Gas Generator became available during the first quarter of the year 2005.
Retail price:
$6,995 US dollars
plus tax, plus shipping FOB from Cleveland, Ohio
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May 22nd, 2006 07:18 PM #22Originally Posted by theveed
Then again, the technology is young. It will be 10 more years before the science community can conclude that the technology is indeed practical.
Just don't know how pure is the water though.Last edited by CoDer; May 22nd, 2006 at 07:20 PM.
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May 22nd, 2006 07:19 PM #23Originally Posted by CoDer
What they are proposing in their electrolysis process is that they are able to get H2, H (monoatomic!!!) & 02.
AFAIK... creation of a monoatomic Hydrogen can only be done on really low temperatures since it is very unstable.
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May 22nd, 2006 07:25 PM #24Originally Posted by mazdamazda
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May 22nd, 2006 07:28 PM #25Originally Posted by CoDer
It now seems more clear; Brown's Gas is just 'expanded water molecules'. Brown's Gas is too heavy to be mon-atomic, it is even too heavy to be di-atomic; but it is exactly the right weight to be water-gas (di-hydrogen oxide in gaseous form).
I currently think that Brown's Gas is water and that it is water that has absorbed electricity like a sponge absorbs water. I think that the atomic bonds are NOT broken, so Brown's Gas is STILL WATER; just in a high energy gaseous form that is NOT steam.
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May 22nd, 2006 08:13 PM #28Originally Posted by CoDer
The best part of this technology is, when you burn the HHO gas it turns bak into water. That is a perfect green technology!
But it would be more than 10 years before we can get an affordable comercial form of this technology into our cars.
As a system to power anything by itself, it will never happen. The proposed system is like trying to make a perpetual motion machine.
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May 22nd, 2006 08:16 PM #29
The technology is too good to be true as of this moment. Maybe 20 more years before the scientific can come-up with a very efficient alternative fuel. Maybe water is indeed a good start in looking for that alternative fuel.
When you think of it... The technology is indeed shocking. How in the world can you bond two Hydrogen Atom? With one oxygen atom? that's water!
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May 22nd, 2006 08:25 PM #30Originally Posted by CoDer
You just missed one crucial point. ENERGY.
If we assume entropy to be zero at the moment, the energy used to split water is the same amount of total energy you get from combining H2 & O2.
So assuming you will need to tap into that system to move something, where will you get that excess energy to power your vehicle? If you take 1% of the total energy in the H2O to H2&O2 to H2O system, then it will only return 99% of the total energy. Taking out 50% from the total energy will make the system return 50% of total energy.
Energy assumed to be whatever form you can use: Kinetic, heat, electrical, chemical, etc.
If it takes 100 Kjoules of energy to electrolize a fixed volume of water to H2 & O2, then ideally it will release back 100 Kjoules of back when you combine H2 & O2 to form water.