Question:

Produce hydrogen to charge battery?

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Can you take the current from a battery to produce hydrogen from water, ignite that hydrogen that is being produced into a small combustible engine, receive a current that is being produced from that small combustible engine that would charge your battery to keep a perpetual cycle going: battery to water, hydrogen to combustible engine, electric charge back to battery (which would keep a steady charge).

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  1. try to log in to our site http;/www.newfuelsaver.com we can explain you there...


  2. It will not work . To have a perpetual motion machine would mean that the energy would be coming From no place. Each time the energy changes from electrical to mechanical should cost u about 30%. Energy lost in heat and friction.

  3. Actually, your  battery produces hydrogen when it's being charged. But no, there is no combination of normal technologies that will produce 'over unity'. For that, you need to tap into the zero point. It's been done a few times, but it's still not understood well enough to use reliably.

  4. Perpetual motion machines don't work, because there is a loss of efficiency in every transformation.  Much of the time, that loss is in heat generated by a reaction or by movement.  The cycle you describe is likely not to produce 25% of the energy you need to be self-sustaining.

  5. No, that would be perpetual motion.  Look up second law of thermodynamics.

  6. I don't really know if this is what your asking but i found a website that you can actually convert your car to run on half water and half gasoline. That means that your millage of your car will like double. You have to check this website out its so wild that someone came up with this idea.

    http://flitzer101.water4gas.hop.clickban...

  7. NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO

    This is a perpetual motion machine.  

    You cannot extract more energy out of a system than you put into it.

    All these "run your car on water" ads you see are total BS designed to get you and your money as far apart as possible.

  8. NO.

    The amount of energy that it would take to produce enough hydrogen is staggering.

    The battery would run out of energy FAR before enough hydrogen was produced to run an engine.

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