Posted by
admin on Feb 28th
I have just come across information to the effect that it is indeed possible to use ordinary tap water to drive your car. Now isn’t that sweet? If this is not an answer to the world’s crisis of the hole in the sky then what will count as a solution? On the other hand could this be a signal that this is the begining of the water wars that we have heared of being predicted as the wars of the future?
Posted by
admin on Feb 27th
im just wondering what would happen for an experiment. im pretty sure that when you mix copper (pennies) and Vinnegar (acid) that itcreates hydrogen gas, which is flammable. what i was wondering is
1. is that true
2. would it rise so could you capture the gas with something like a baloon
3. would it be explosive if lighted?
please answer
Posted by
admin on Feb 27th
This is a real possability, and I want the a company to contact John Kanzius, who discovered this technique, to be notified by an automotive company or companies.
Posted by
admin on Feb 21st
is there any pros and con of using it in a diesel
Posted by
admin on Feb 21st
For the $Billions of tax-payer welfare that we are providing for this industry, shouldn’t our environment be cleaner? Is the farm lobby so strong that politicians won’t act on this utter waste of taxpayer dollars?
“Of all crops grown in the U.S., corn demands the most massive fixes of herbicides, insecticides, and natural gas-based fertilizers, while creating the most soil erosion.
Meeting the lifetime fuel requirements of just one year’s worth of U.S. population growth with straight ethanol (assuming each baby lived 70 years), would cost 52,000 tons of insecticides, 735,000 tons of herbicides, 93 million tons of fertilizer, and the loss of 2 inches of soil from the 12.3 billion acres on which the corn was grown.
Other parts of the biorefinery production process release pollution as well. Prodded by hundreds of complaints at the Gopher State Ethanol plant in St. Paul, where residents complained that the plant smelled like “rubbing alcohol mixed with burning corn,” the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency began testing emissions from the plant. They found high levels of carbon monoxide, methanol, toluene and other Volatile Organic Compounds, including formaldehyde and acetaldehyde, both of which are known to cause cancer in animals.
The EPA then tested other ethanol plants and concluded that “most, if not all” ethanol plants are emitting air pollutants at many times the rate allowed by their permits.
A National Academy of Sciences report concluded that the “commonly available ethanol and MTBE blends do little to reduce smog.” They also found that, compared with MTBE blends, ethanol blends result in more pollutants evaporating from vehicle gas tanks.
Ethanol costs three and a half times as much as gasoline to produce42 and contains only 60% as much energy per gallon as gasoline.43 So, while a gallon of ethanol-blended gas may cost the same as regular gasoline at the pump, it won’t take you as far.
Ethanol must be blended with gasoline. But ethanol absorbs water. Gasoline doesn’t. Therefore, ethanol cannot be shipped by regular petroleum pipelines. Instead, it must be shipped separately and mixed on-site. Shipping by truck, rail car, or barge are far more expensive than pipelines. They also carry larger risks of accidents during shipping.
Among the waste by-products of ethanol production is a corn mash known as distiller’s grains. a study published by Kansas State University researchers in December of 2007 found an increased prevalence of the deadly E. coli 0157 bacterium in the hind-gut of cattle fed distiller’s grains.
Ethanol production using corn grain requires 29% more fossil energy than the ethanol fuel produces. Using switchgrass requires 50% more; wood biomass: 57% more.”http://www.energyjustice.net/ethanol/fac…
Posted by
admin on Feb 21st
How many moles of hydrogen gas will be produced from a reaction that evolved 40 grams of the gas? (Molecular mass of hydrogen gas, H2 = 2.0)
Posted by
admin on Feb 16th
I want to feed wisp of hydrogen gas from battery into air-intake, hoping it will reduce gas consumption. What can happen, can anyone suggest ?.
Posted by
admin on Feb 16th
I accidentally put some water, i believe about few ML of water, into my fuel tank of my car. Did this affect my car a lot? What should i do to overcome this problem? Will my car breakdown someday?
Posted by
admin on Feb 16th
Or maybe let nature take its course. lol
I adore you for answering!

poll: what makes you happy?
Posted by
admin on Feb 14th
I am just curious after watching some videos at http://water4gas.spruz.com
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