It is absolute bullshit. Utter and complete bullshit. And I'm being polite.Death from the Sea wrote:so are things that promise the ability to use water to make hydrogen to improve the fuel efficiency of your vehicle BS too?
as seen here
http://www.water-4-fuel.com/
The only people who are laughing to the bank on these scams are the scammers and snake-oil salesmen who sell these kits and plans for $50.
Yes, it is possible to produce hydrogen from water via electrolysis. That is legitimate. However, claiming that one will dramatically improve fuel efficiency by burning this hydrogen is complete bunk. Remember, hydrogen isn't an energy source. It's a kind of battery. You won't magically get more energy burning it than you put into liberating it from the water molecules. And, in fact, when you burn it in an ICE, you promptly throw away something like 70% of the energy as waste heat, which means you come nowhere near breaking even. Especially given the miniscule quantities of hydrogen produced by these systems.
Furthermore, these "water from fuel" scams fit the traditional pattern of snake-oil schemes:
A) Misuse of scientific terms: Yep. For example, the link claims that one gallon of water produces 1800+ liters of hydrogen gas. Well, that's nice, until one remembers just how dense hydrogen gas is. Apparently, these clowns have never heard of the Zeppelin, and that if one runs the numbers, one will find that these systems are, in fact, in violation of the laws of physics (because they'd have to produce more energy than you put into them for their claims to work.)
B) Wild, unsubstantiated claims: Yep, there's plenty of those. Backed by lots of unsigned testimonials and zero peer-reviewed research whatsoever.
C) Wild claims of conspiracy theories: You betcha! These systems claim you're sticking it to Big Oil and their Big Car Company lapdogs who doesn't want you to use their miracle technologies because you're taking money from their pockets and putting it into your own.