Go to www.waterpoweredcar.com and check this out... This technology will save our planet. Go to the links page and near the bottom of the page there is a link that gives basic step by step instructions on how to
CONVERT ANY GASOLINE POWERED
VEHICLE INTO A WATER POWERED CAR! Spread the word!
2006-12-13
00:28:35
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6 answers
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asked by
rebeccasventure
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in
Environment
YES it is possible! The hydrogen and oxygen are seperated by applying a slight electrical charge to the water and the energy expelled from breaking the covalent bond is what powers the car...Please if you do not believe it go to http://waterpoweredcar.com
please look!
2006-12-13
00:51:44 ·
update #1
HAS NOBODY BOTHERED TO CLICK ON THE LINK I PROVIDED? Investigate before you answer, please. This is neither electrolosis, steam, or hydrogen power! Please don't assume without at least looking into what I am talking about.
2006-12-13
02:42:22 ·
update #2
It does not seem like anyone is doing any research before calling this a hoax... why do people feel like they have knowledge when all they are doing is quoting what they were taught in school? This is a very simple experiment to do, and it is very simple to convert most devices to a water fuel cell... all of these people say it is a hoax but the people who have done it know better. I read all about this years ago and that very week converted my riding lawn mower to water fuel... since then I have converted a Ford Escort and a Dodge RAM truck..... the easiest thing to do is to ignore something, to call it a hoax and to dismiss it... but doing some research and some experimentation so most people will not bother... what a loss.
All truth passes through three stages: First, it is ridiculed; Second, it is violently opposed; and
Third, it is accepted as self-evident. Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)
2006-12-14 03:42:40
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answer #1
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answered by jake_27_ky 2
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Fuel cells combine oxygen and hydrogen to make water and electricity. Or they can run the other way to use electricity and water to make hydrogen and oxygen. Nothing new about that. They are not burning water, they are burning hydrogen. It isn't a water powered car. It is a hydrogen powered car. They are just using unclear and confusing language to dupe people who don't know any better into thinking they are burning water without actually saying they are burning water, so that later, when somebody sues them, they can say they never said they were burning water.
2006-12-13 01:40:04
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answer #2
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answered by campbelp2002 7
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It does no longer make a lot sense to apply electricity to electrolyze water and then use the hydrogen. How is the hydrogen used? In a gasoline cellular to furnish electricity all yet lower back? it truly is way less demanding to apply the electricity right now in a motor. you're good in that fossil gasoline is the purely right utilizing stress and that the project is purely geographically shifted. till the vehicle is pushed by a first cellular that does no longer derive the raw cloth from a fossil gasoline.
2016-11-26 00:38:56
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answer #3
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answered by klitzner 4
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Yes, but you're wasting your time with the fuel cell, my friend. The Hydrogen Fuel Cell is a load of rubbish when it comes to automobiles, as any respectable tinkerer will tell you. It is VERY easy to convert ANY gasoline engine to hydrogen, and any who says it isn't is a bloody liar, for I myself, a person of 15 years of age, has done it.
2006-12-13 01:12:31
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answer #4
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answered by titanictrainsboats 2
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There is an older answer to this question. In the 1890s and after, there were steam powered cars.
If you burn a very available fuel, you can turn plain water into steam and steam can move the motor. (I don't recommend wood like the original steam locamotives.)
How about corn oil?
2006-12-13 01:00:44
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answer #5
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answered by Differently-abled musician 2
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I'm sorry, but that's a hoax.
A car cannot be run on only water.
Onboard electrolysis is impractical.
The laws of conservation of energy and matter dictate that you can't get out more than you put in.
In actuality, you even get less.
You might want to look into this instead.
http://www.switch2hydrogen.com/
2006-12-13 00:40:06
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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