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I have een working on this for awhile and created a device that creates more then enough hydrogen to run a car. It fits into your gas tank and it consumes aluminum wire and water. you fill the gas tank with water and with some minor modifications to the fuel injection computer and tubing and slight modifications to the trunk so you can feet a spool of aluminum welding wire (I used a 1999 saturn SL2) and I used a small brass tank for excess hydrogen storage with a pressure gage to stop the generator when it hits a certianl pressure. I found i can run the car just as if I did with gasoline. I was able to cruise the Highway at around 90 MPH with a problem and no hesitation on take off and good acceleration. My question is do you think I could market this? is there truely a market for it? Are there any grants from the gov't for alternative energy inventors? Would anyone be willing to help me? I feel this is the safe way to ahve my questions answered. e-mail: tvtech55@yahoo.com

2006-09-11 13:30:41 · 3 answers · asked by kc2irv 4 in Consumer Electronics Other - Electronics

3 answers

Someone received a BS in BS. However, a car can run on hydrogen with a little changing in the systems ignition and injection programs. Carb engines do not even need adjusting, they will run well on hydrogen straight from a compressed tank.

2006-09-12 07:15:00 · answer #1 · answered by Brandon L 2 · 0 0

Nice try, but your story sounds pretty bogus to me.

The car engine is designed to run on liquid fuels and not gaseous fuels like hydrogen. Aluminum wire and water does not create hydrogen unless there is a current running through the wire.

You might be able to use the car battery to send a current through the aluminum wire to create hydrogen. But the electricity from the battery is created by your moving engine whose power comes from the gasoline in your tank. So, you're not really creating any new energy by making the hydrogen.

2006-09-11 13:46:47 · answer #2 · answered by tedhyu 5 · 0 0

I have to agree with tedhyu, although I make an exception on the car engines not running on gaseous mixtures. Check out propane.
All you need to do is file patent and wait for the 60minutes news team to call.

2006-09-11 16:20:10 · answer #3 · answered by Aurthor D 4 · 0 0

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