Have you installed the hydrogen thing to your car to let it run on water? Was it hard to do? Expensive?

The high gas prices are not being solved by the government – so as usual, it is going to be up to us to solve our own problems. Does the gas/hydrogen thing really work?


Water 4 Gas

5 Responses to “Have you installed the hydrogen thing to your car to let it run on water? Was it hard to do? Expensive?”

Jan 9th at 7:58 pm By: Jose x

Did you know that you can convert your car or truck to a water-burning vehicle (Water Hybrid)?

Water4Gas is a Do-It-Yourself, affordable and SIMPLE technology. Water is supplemental to gasoline or diesel fuel – I have doubled fuel economy (61 MPG) in my Toyota Corolla 1999, and many more have doubled or even tripled their mileage. Too good to be true? Read on…

You may already know that water is supplemental to gasoline (petrol) or diesel fuel. However it is possible and VERY EASY to extract energy from water to run your car on water too.

We have water-to-energy converters running in all our vehicles since 2006. YOU CAN, TOO! I’m about to show you a SIMPLE technology you can have right now, called Water4Gas. It’s one of the most PRACTICAL free-energy devices, marked by extraordinary simplicity and effectiveness.

Jan 9th at 8:56 pm By: meppie l

Hello Gone Too Long

I’ve read one of the “Run your car on water” eBooks – I thought the instructions were extremely easy to follow, especially considering I have very limited mechanical knowledge. So I’m sure you shouldn’t have a problem installing the kit.

So basically answering your question, yes they do work. However, depending on the car you install the fuel cells into will determine how efficient the car will become and how much money you’ll save on running costs.

For example, I installed the hydrogen fuel cells into my son’s 1989 Camry Ultima with his help as a sought of bonding experience, also to make sure we didn’t stuff up my car haha

Anyways we currently run the car as a water/petrol burning hybrid – we’re not completely sure how much money we’ve saved but my son is convinced he’s saving around 40% on running costs which over time is a lot of money, especially for him.

To summarise; yes it does work, how much it will cost depends greatly on the materials you use – altogether it didn’t costs us that much and it was really easy to do (even for somebody like me)

Finally, you may have noticed that there are several eBooks on the subject currently available on the internet, however most of which are a waste of time. Below you’ll find a link to a review of the 3 best eBooks on how to convert your car to a water burning hybrid. So if you want to run your car on water and save a bundle of money on running costs then I advise you to check it out. It’s what I used and I haven’t looked back since

http://www.bright-insight.com/auto/

Jan 9th at 9:14 pm By: hhoengineer

Frequent service and maintenance along with poor fabrication, installation, and understanding of Hydrogen Hybrid Adapters could be HARMFUL – ecoMPH

Jan 9th at 9:52 pm By: King

I posted this answer to another user, you might have missed it. They asked how hard was it to install. And it’s extremely inexpensive compared to the price you’d end up spending in gas.

Not hard at all. You can do it yourself within a hour or two. Honestly, YES it does work. I have done this to my 96 Saturn and currently get about 50 miles per gallon.

I wrote a blog review about it here:

http://www.freewebs.com/isitworthmytime/blog.htm?blogentryid=3686482

It’s very simple. You don’t change your engine or computer. A quart-size (95O cc) container is placed somewhere under the hood. You fill it with DISTILLED WATER and a little bit of BAKING SODA. The device gets vacuum and electricity (12 Volts) from the engine, and produces HHO gas (Hydrogen+Oxygen). The HHO gas is supplied to the engine’s intake manifold or carburetor as shown below.

Hope this helps.

King

Jan 9th at 10:27 pm By: Trinity

Yes, I have and several friends, co-workers and family members.

There are many factors involved in whether an HHO generator will work well or not. The major factors are:
1. what are the electrodes made of, how well will they conduct electricity and how quickly will they corrode?
2. What electrolyte mixture are you using in the water (electrolyte is required to make the water conduct electricity to split the hydrogen and oxygen)
3. how much oxygen are you involving in the gas out to the engine?
4. How many o2 sensors does your vehicle have and how will they react to the extra oxygen they will detect? (sometimes the o2 sensors will detect more oxygen and increase your fuel ratio to compensate for it – I personally have not had this problem, but have heard others record it)

Speaking from my personal experience with the generator I built, I have literally TRIPLED my gas mileage.

Potential hazards include:
1. Chance of exploding HHO gases if mis-used.
2. Blowing fuses.
3. Water damage to the exhaust over time.
4. Water in the engine – if you are really really careless.

I am part of an Alternative Energy Research group and HHO Hybriding is one of our focal studies. We have Free diagrams and Plans on our myspace page for people who want to build their own HHO generators and we have instructions on how to use them properly to maximize results.
http://www.myspace.com/trinityenergies
A 20% increase could easily be a placebo effect.. a 120-300% increase is nothing to scoff at.

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