Bob Sanders wrote:
> Patrick Shirkey, mused, then expounded:
>
>> What I have ascertained from watching the videos of people demonstrating
>> the effect is that water can be exploded and the energy that is released
>> can be used to turn a rotor on an engine.
>>
>>
>
> If I may suggest, surf over to - http://www.theoildrum.com/ for a
> serious lesson on energy, because Hydrogen is not a fuel, in the
> traditional sense - it's a synthethic fuel. It requires fuel
> natural gas or electricity to create it.
>
>
Or as MIT researchers have just proven it just needs a little bit of
sunlight to split hydrogen from water. Could it be that physicists have
been missing a critical proponent of molecular bonding of water for the
past couple hundred years and that recent research has filled in a gap
in the knowledge base? Could it even be possible that we don't actually
know everything about the machinations of the universe and there is
knowledge that we could be learning in this next century that will make
considerable differences to the laws that we know already?
> While they have a very nice search function, perhaps the place to start
> is - http://canada.theoildrum.com/node/4077
>
> Title - Weekend Energy Listening: The H2 Economy vs the Electron Economy
>
> Gee, I got lucky. Something that ties this list in with the topic.
>
> Bob
> -
>
Interesting interview. What he made clear is that we need multiple
energy sources. My blog is focused on water as the source and hydrogen
gas is a possible part of the solution. What I'm mostly interested in is
this electrical circuit which can be used to instantly create an
explosion from water. That seems like a very useful solution if current
engines can be converted to use the circuit...
-- Patrick Shirkey Boost Hardware Ltd. _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-dev mailing list Linux-audio-dev@email-addr-hidden http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-devReceived on Tue Aug 5 20:15:16 2008
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