Does that include the bottle?
Sometimes I wish I'd finished my A-levels (pure maths, applied maths and physics).
"kJ/kg storage" - I thought energy density would be a cool name for that ... googles ... Wiki/Energy_density -
Energy density by mass (MJ/kg)
* Lithium ion battery 0.54–0.72
Compressed air at 20 bar (at 12°C), without container 0.27
Compressed air at 300 bar (at 12°C), without container 0.512
Energy density by volume (MJ/L)
* Lithium ion battery 0.9–1.9
Compressed air at 20 bar (at 12°C), without container 0.01
Compressed air at 300 bar (at 12°C), without container 0.16
So I guess energy density is one of those half-remembered terms from my school days.
* A typically available lithium ion cell with an Energy Density of 201 wh/kg
If there are no test results, why withhold your judgment? Has there been insufficient time to test it? Have all the for-hire dynamometers in the country burned out? I think you're being way too generous to persons whose entire approach to their invention stinks of fraudulent intent and pandering to magical thinking. If a claim you didn't happen to find so attractive were made by someone else, and the means of testing it it were obvious to you, would you give it even a moment's credence on the basis of the arguments you're putting forth here?
How about a reductio ad absurdum?
I claim that I have the power to increase my car battery's voltage by 10 percent by waving this magic wand over the hood. I'll sell you the plans for the wand for 20 dollars. Various people have been reported to have seen the headlights brighten when I do this on my car. Now you can have this magic on your car for only 20 dollars' worth of plans (you provide the parts for the gadget, sorry I can't tell you what they are until you buy the plans).
Hey, nobody has come up with a definitive test that debunks my claim. Of course if my device actually worked, I could at least measure the effect with a ten dollar voltmeter in front of witnesses, and publish the results, but why should the burden be on me? You disprove it, so that I still have the chance to tell you you did it wrong, built it wrong, or used the wrong technique, and keep on selling my product. So, why don't you send for the instructions?
I repeat, the burden for testing a device like this, whose claimed effect runs contrary to conventional physics and engineering, is entirely up to the person promoting it. An honest person would test his claims, and a dishonest person would not. If the promoter has not provided even the simplest objective test results to back up his claim, it is because he knows no such results can be obtained. You'd be a fool to think otherwise.
It is nobody else's responsibility to debunk this stuff, because until it is proven by its inventor or promoter, it is, ipso facto, bunk!
Oh..I see what KOA is on about with the "surplus" electricity..
Assuming that the alternator is constantly under load generating electricity and that 'surplus" electricity is being wasted and might as ell be put to use powering the car.
I was actually thinking the same sort of thing, (and yes I''m aware that the "excess" power is very minimal), because upthread I stated that when I turned on the headlights on my old skanky van, I could hear a noticeable drop in engine RPM. Yet when I turn on the lights in my newer, non skanky van, I don't notice the same effect.
I got to thinking that there might be something to this, that my alternator might just be constantly generating power regardless of demand....
But then it hit me last night....it's my daytime running lights.
I don't know if you guys have daytime running lights in the US, but we here in Canada have had them for years..
So my alternator is constantly under load.
What? Are you suggesting that somebody uses time and money to disprove the claim? That's not the way things work, dude. Onus of proof is on the claimant.
So what?
OK, and an alternator is 12V so the power is 36W. That is all you can feed back to the engine, not counting losses. One horsepower is 785W. How much difference do you think 35W makes?
No, not really. Water injection and various other schemes can be used to boos engine output, but there is always a cost. All this is already well researched.
Well, why don't you ask that question to the guy who claims this works?
Seriously KOTA, car manufacturers have been optimizing engines for well over a century. Power output and mileage have always been competition factors, during the last few decades they have been major competition factors. Do you really, really think that if there was a way to achieve a significant gain in hp and mpg using a simple device, then car manufacturers all over the world would not be installing it?
Hans
Thank you for the response, but I have already been corrected several times on the errors you pointed out.
I agree with you as to who is responsible for paying for such a test. I am NOT here to suggest that anyone 'here' pay for such a test. I am merely suggesting that your theoritical claims are merely that, without verified test results to back up your claims. We live in an age where information flows freely. We have seen here TONS of tests results on MANY different types of energy saving devices. No one that presented those results paid little than a click of the mouse or two.
So, while I accept that the outright responsibility for 'proving' that these things work, is indeed on the seller, I am merely asking those here that claim it is a fraud, to back up their claims with documentation. This would INDEED be 'proof' that it isn't an efficiency device as all.
So far, I have not seen such test results, to confirm the claims against the device.
This makes people think you didn’t quite get the point, and that you are thinking the opposite of what you are saying.So far, I have not seen such test results, to confirm the claims against the device.
This may or may not surprise you, but I AGREE with you, as to who's responsibility it is to prove this works.
That said, 'I' am NOT selling these things. 'I' have absolutely NO responsibility to you or anyone to provide such test. I am just here LOOKING FOR results.
Now, given that I have heard a half a dozen accounts of actual positive results, I am withhold MY personal final judgement until I 'see' controlled test results from a dynamometer.
If you or anyone else has seen or ran such a test, I'd LOVE to see the results.
Thank you.
Just because you don’t notice it doesn’t mean it is happening.
And it doesn’t matter if your light is always on, the load is proportional to the consumption, you are not losing anything.
Oh..I see what KOA is on about with the "surplus" electricity..
Assuming that the alternator is constantly under load generating electricity and that 'surplus" electricity is being wasted and might as ell be put to use powering the car.
And we have not seen such test results to confirm the claims FOR the device.So, while I accept that the outright responsibility for 'proving' that these things work, is indeed on the seller, I am merely asking those here that claim it is a fraud, to back up their claims with documentation. This would INDEED be 'proof' that it isn't an efficiency device as all.
So far, I have not seen such test results, to confirm the claims against the device.
For the love of whatever, buy a motorcycle.First, ArvinMeritor in cooperation with MIT was developing a plasma reformer for use in ICE. They sold the technology to EMCON for ~$300 million however no word as of late what they are doing with it.
As stated previously, an electrolyzer "HHO" generator on an OEM production vehicle is neither practical or even safe as the average Joe/Jane Idiot would likely ruin it or turn it into a disaster waiting to happen. Trucking firms and backyard mechanics are more suited for this. A gasoline reformer would be much better.
I've been doing this for over 10 years on 3 different vehicles. I raced cars for 25 years and worked in the automotive engineering business the last 15, 10 in Aerospace previous. It is not difficult to gain 20% using this mundane technology. My 2003 Durango 4.7L now has well over 60,000 miles logged with a 6 cell plate type electrolyzer with ~75% efficiency putting out 2.5-3.0 LPM. A new unit is in the works using this new technology. I really don't care about nabobs who don't have the ability or desire to experiment; leave that to those of us who do.
We can discuss the finer points and technical aspects of how it works, but that is available from various sources so there's no reason to impress with BS. The idea that an engine must be completely redesigned to run at leaner conditions comes from ignorance and is your way of attempting to make it appear you know the first thing about combustion processes and engine design.
Also, your example of increasing efficiency by eliminating the fuel pump is quite hilarious and would be undetectable. In fact, you couldn't measure the difference in efficiency by turning off the entire electrical system.
Having never purchased 'water4gas' or any other device I cannot comment on them, however have had correspondence with Fran Giroux who has much experience with "HHO", I have confidence in him.
The following focuses on commericial vehicles using diesel fuel. The government is now beginning to acknowledge "HHO" injection as a viable technology.
GUIDELINES FOR USE OF HYDROGEN FUEL IN COMMERCIAL VEHICLES Final Report
CHEC guarntees 10% minimum fuel mileage increase with reported actual real world results much higher. That their system is installed on several thousand vehicles pretty much makes you the fool, unless of course you think trucking fleets are in the habit of flushing money down the toilet.
Performance and Fuel Consumption Estimation of a Hydrogen Enriched Gasoline Engine At Part-Load Operation
From the article:
[URL]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehosting/thum_1032348f2460c17095.jpg[/URL]
I realize you've put all your eggs in the naysayer basket and therefore must do what you can to save face, but you don't have the foggiest.
From a technical standpoint, to repeat what many others have said in a slightly different manner, a car, once fueled and running might be considered a closed system. It converts fuel into work at X% efficiency, which can never be greater than 100%. If you inject something to make the engine run faster or produce higher torque, which is entirely possible, you have to get that something from inside the closed system. But, and here's the catch, to get a 10% improvement, you might have to expend 20% of the fuel! Whatever the improvement, you have to use more than you gain to get it.
The only way this will work is if you inject something like hydrogen from outside the closed system. Then your 10% improvement isn't being a burden on the closed system's fuel. But now you have changed the parameters and you lose again.
Last month I were at the BMW museum in münchen. They had an exibit on hydrogen a car/engine. The idea was liquid hydrogen in a well insolated tank.
It is amacing that they havent throught of adding a bit of hydrogen to the air intake, since it seems to improve combustion and milage lots![]()
Liquid hydrogen? In a car??
I considered that interpretation, but you're still asking for something for nothing.My impression is that the theory is different: that the H2g and O2g are not acting as additional fuel, but as a fuel additive to improve engine efficiency.
Not quite. A small of amount of energy is expended to produce less energy (durn those pesky thermodynamics laws again) to feed back to an engine already running at peak efficiency. Or at least it was. Now it's less efficient because it has more work to do.Analogy: consider the vehicle is diverting energy to operate the air mix. The small amount of energy diverted to the air intake's logic circuit pays off in terms of fuel efficiency.
I considered that interpretation, but you're still asking for something for nothing.
I can agree that if you have a poorly designed, built or tuned internal combustion engine that is running at a low efficiency, that many things could be done to improve the power output. Maybe you could recapture unburned fuel and feed it back into the intake, which would be a lot harder than a simple tuneup, but it might work as proof-of-concept.
But today's cars' engines are pretty efficient (How efficient? Pretty darn.) They don't waste a lot of fuel and their throughput is close to what is theoretically possible given friction, temperatures, etc. There's not much that can be done to improve the input -- auto companies sure would have done that already if they could.
Let's not be afraid to call a fraud a fraud and be done with it.
But is only in R&D. There are no commercially available compressed air cars in production at the moment.A compressed air car has been made and functions fine.