Vehicles operating on water?

A relatively obscure Japanese company called Genepax has allegedly developed the technology to quickly break down water into its components of H2 and O2, then re-combine them through injection into an engine cylinder, spark them back into H2O (water) and away you go merrily down the road, leaving an exhaust trail of nothing more benign than pure water.

Possible? Con?

2008-06-20T18:42:33Z

uwillnomyname: Yes, you are right--it is very informative/educational. I very seldom watch T.V., but I do enjoy the History channel.

COOKIE2008-06-20T19:14:17Z

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Ha! Just got done watching this
from the RP link.

From some of the vids comments,
it seems to be a great idea, but
appears a lot of quirks
need to be worked out.

Wouldn't that just be a grand way
to really screw the oil companies!!

Prof. Dave2008-06-23T02:27:51Z

The up side is less pollution and getting away from fossil fuels. The down side to this is that hydrogen is very, very explosive I mean remember the Hindenburg. Also the amount of money it takes to make these cars makes them unaffordable for most all people. Unless they can get the cost way down and make sure there is no real safety issues, well at least as safe as gas then I don't see this becoming anything more than an idea that works but is not efficient.

BULLDOG2008-06-23T02:19:21Z

HOWDY!!!

I have watched on TV just this last week how a man has already made his. I can't remember how it was done but to my knowledge it is simple to do if you get the know how to do it.

His type was in the trunk of the car and I did not like the looks of it but if it really works; why not?

STAY SAFE!!!
Bulldog

Brothers Of Destruction Rulezzz!2008-06-23T13:45:42Z

That would be fantastic!! I would love to have a car that runs on water because I HATE GASOLINE.........gasoline is expensive, smells bad, cause pollution, is highly flammable, etc etc etc.

Guys, let's all stop using gasoline and kick the OPEC gasoline back to hell!!

Instruisto2008-06-21T01:39:54Z

Hydrogen is hard to store and use; it makes other materials brittle.

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