IT ALSO WORKS ON YOUR
TRUCK / RV / MOTORCYCLE / AIRPLANE (ETC)
Will This Work?
Although we cannot guarantee it, we believe these plans will enable you to build a car that runs on water.
If you test it out, though,...
Here's how you can build a methanol fuel cell, at home, from band aids, a Membrane Electrode Assembly (MEA) and some stainless steel bug screen.
So, here are the things you need:
1. Two big band aids
They will need to be...
Two UK researchers, David Worsley and Maarten Wijdekop have made up a paint that could produce electricity by gathering the energy from the Sun. A consortium led by Swansea University in the UK hopes to use that process to...
The energy race has begun. All the players are in the arena, but there's something bigger some of them seek... free energy is freedom for mankind.
Core77.com's "Greener Gadgets Competition" shows up a system invented by Alexander Parker, that could power your laptop, cellphone, or other device that has buttons as an input, to an extent that could replace your battery (for example, if you...
Many older and recent inventions claim anomalies while trying to produce energetic phenomena from water. Some of them use standard electrolysis to produce hydrogen, which in turn helps gasoline/diesel to a more efficient combustion. Electrolysis efficiency is improved by...
German scientists have found a way of transforming body heat into electricity using thermoelectric devices. The discovery means that we may be able to operate our mobile phones using nothing but the warmth of our hands in the future.
New...
In July 2005, an American mechanic released most of the details of his simple conversion system which allows an ordinary car to use water as the only fuel.
A long time has elapsed since then and it is highly probably...
The simplest fuel cell "burns" hydrogen in a flameless chemical reaction to produce electricity. In order to 'burn' the hydrogen, a fuel cell needs a source of oxygen and this is usually obtained from air. The only by-product from...
NOT many people want a nuclear power station in their backyard, but that's the prospect facing communities on both sides of the Atlantic as governments weigh up where to build a new wave of reactors.



























