michaelb15 wrote on Jul 12
th, 2008 at 8:19pm:
Im kinda wondering how much electricity it takes to do such a thing..
but with a flame "hotter then the sun" prolly wouldnt matter much after the cycle started..
and how can it be realisticly used? like if you tried to heat up a vat of water, to power a steam generator.. you'd melt a hole into whatever ur heating..
but steams old fashon
gotta think fresh
Theres an article on the fastest steam powered car...
But HHO electolysis doesnt have to be used for the sole purpose of making hydrogen to form steam...
Use it to get the hydrogren for nuclear fusion
Use it to burn inside a combustion engine for things like cars
Fusion is getting there. If it can be controlled it may end up being inside each of our cars in many years to come. It has the potential to keep power needs going forever, but it is unsafe at times and then extremely lethal.
The problem with the burning of HHO to run cars is that it might not always produce enough energy to sustain itself. Petrol running cars are fine because they just need a spark and a bit of battery to get going, then all the spinning keeps the battery charged. Making HHO requires a fair bit more as you need to actually create it, then burn it. Stick enough dynamos in the right places and it could work, and work very well indeed.
I wonder what the fuel consumption is like on a HHO car. No doubt droughts and other things will be a lethal consequence... well until you burn the water that is.