Posted by mikeandeb on December 22, 2008, 4:14 pm
I heard about this on a radio program a few days ago. Has anybody heard
about this or have any experience with this?
http://water4gas.com/
Mike
Posted by vaughn on December 23, 2008, 11:32 am
>I heard about this on a radio program a few days ago.
Spam/Scam
Bye
Vaughn
Posted by Michael B on December 23, 2008, 11:51 pm
Yeah, I find it appalling that people don't understand rudimentary
gas function.
The water has been broken down ino hydrogen and oxygen. In
a ratio of two to one. And what do those gases do to fill their
open valence shell? They combine. To form water. So maybe we
should be talking about how expensive it is to make water vapor
to go into the air mixture, when simply bubbling through a water jar
would accomplish the same thing. Without using any electricity.
And if some idiot actually managed to keep those molecules
apart till they got into the combustion chamber, it would be time
to discover what embrittlement is all about, or what a modern
vehicle computer does with the timing when there is engine knock
from the hydrogen having a flame spread rate 8 times that of
gasoline-air, or having hydrogen as part of the crankcase gases.
So even if your query was spam, I'd like to hear from someone
that is really doing the Brown Gas routine.
> I heard about this on a radio program a few days ago. Has anybody heard
> about this or have any experience with this?
> http://water4gas.com/
> Mike
Posted by $cienceboy on December 24, 2008, 12:25 am
Michael B wrote:
> Yeah, I find it appalling that people don't understand rudimentary
> gas function.
>
> The water has been broken down ino hydrogen and oxygen. In
> a ratio of two to one. And what do those gases do to fill their
> open valence shell? They combine. To form water. So maybe we
> should be talking about how expensive it is to make water vapor
> to go into the air mixture, when simply bubbling through a water jar
> would accomplish the same thing. Without using any electricity.
>
> And if some idiot actually managed to keep those molecules
> apart till they got into the combustion chamber, it would be time
> to discover what embrittlement is all about, or what a modern
> vehicle computer does with the timing when there is engine knock
> from the hydrogen having a flame spread rate 8 times that of
> gasoline-air, or having hydrogen as part of the crankcase gases.
>
> So even if your query was spam, I'd like to hear from someone
> that is really doing the Brown Gas routine.
>
>
>> I heard about this on a radio program a few days ago. Has anybody heard
>> about this or have any experience with this?
>>
>> http://water4gas.com/
>>
>> Mike
>
Correct me if I am wrong, but I thought Hydrogen implodes unless
petroleum exploding?
Just my opinion (I no way endorse this water4gas product)
David
Posted by Michael B on December 24, 2008, 6:23 am
> Correct me if I am wrong, but I thought Hydrogen implodes unless
> petroleum exploding?
> Just my opinion (I no way endorse this water4gas product)
> David
In the atmosphere, without a containment, hydrogen functions
the same way as any flammable gas in the presence of an appropriate
oxidation agent. It burns. If it is in a containment vessel, it would
be
be seen as an explosion.
Now, there COULD be some value to a small amount of hydrogen
in the air-gas mixture of an auto combustion chamber. It could
function to enhance the flame spread from the spark plug. But
keeping that mixture to the exact amount to prevent apparent
preignition(engine knock) would involve more research, in my
opinion, than I have seen in the water4gas documentation.