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On Sep 11, 1:56 pm, Gogarty wrote:
In article s.com, says... Burn salt water instead . . . http://www.breitbart.com/article.php...show_article=1 Wilbur Hubbard Hmmm. He's using radio frequencies to dissociate water into its elements, hydrogen and oxygen. What becomes of the sodiumn and chlorine ions? Not to mention the other elements and compounds found in sea water. The only thing that's burning here is the hydrogen, either recombining with the oxygen or after being piped away. And then there's the chlorine. Does it recombine with hydrogen instead of sodium and become HCl aka hydrochloric acid? We'll be buring diesel for quite some time, I'm afraid. I don't think this is what he is doing. If that was the case it wouldn't need to be salt water. Distilled fresh water would be preferred. They also said that it burns at 300 degrees F. Hydrogen burns at less than 100 degrees Fahrenheit. He isn't just separating out oxygen and hydrogen and burning the hydrogen. Something else is going on here. |
#2
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![]() I don't think this is what he is doing. If that was the case it wouldn't need to be salt water. Distilled fresh water would be preferred. They also said that it burns at 300 degrees F. Hydrogen burns at less than 100 degrees Fahrenheit. He isn't just separating out oxygen and hydrogen and burning the hydrogen. Something else is going on here. Check your figures Hydrogen burns way hotter than body temperature |
#3
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On Wed, 12 Sep 2007 08:18:23 +0100, "Richard"
wrote: I don't think this is what he is doing. If that was the case it wouldn't need to be salt water. Distilled fresh water would be preferred. They also said that it burns at 300 degrees F. Hydrogen burns at less than 100 degrees Fahrenheit. He isn't just separating out oxygen and hydrogen and burning the hydrogen. Something else is going on here. Check your figures Hydrogen burns way hotter than body temperature Hot enough to melt aluminum oxide[as in saphire] and is actually used for that. casady |
#4
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On Sep 12, 12:18 am, "Richard" wrote:
I don't think this is what he is doing. If that was the case it wouldn't need to be salt water. Distilled fresh water would be preferred. They also said that it burns at 300 degrees F. Hydrogen burns at less than 100 degrees Fahrenheit. He isn't just separating out oxygen and hydrogen and burning the hydrogen. Something else is going on here. Check your figures Hydrogen burns way hotter than body temperature sorry typo I meant 1000 degrees F. It's technically 932 degrees F. He said he got 3000 degrees F out of it. |
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