Quote:
Originally Posted by race-rodz
H2O would be a single molecule with 2parts "H" and 1part "O", where HHO would be broke down into specific parts of "H" &"O", hydrogen fuel is nothing new, when it burns it produces H2O, the tricky part is breaking the H2O apart in the first place, which im GUESSING he is doing through some type of serious reverse polarity charge.
this concept is not new at all, being able to break down water into hydrogen and oxygen, then burn the hydrogen, which gives off water as a by-product, and capturing it to return to the system as fuel. in theory you would never need to refuel, other than losses due to inefficencies(sp) in the system.... which would only be water vapor escaping back into the atmosphere to eventually return back to the same never ending supply of water.
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But if you extract the Hydrogen elements from the H2O molecule, wouldn't the only thing left over be Oxygen? How would you still have H2O if you remove the Hydrogen element(s)? I'm just not following the chemistry side of it.
EDIT: Here's their website:
http://hytechapps.com/applications/index.html
Quote:
"In this paper we present, apparently for the first time, various measurements on a mixture of hydrogen and oxygen called HHO gas produced via a new electrolyzer ... The measurements herein reported suggest the existence in the HHO gas of stable clusters composed of H and O atoms, their dimers H-O, and their molecules H2, O2 and H2O whose bond cannot entirely be of valence type. Numerous anomalous experimental measurements on the HHO gas are reported in this paper for the first time. ..."
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