Apologies in advance to European readers who will not appreciate the contextual nuances in this post (first in a series): which is a take-off on the "MasterCharge" series of television advertisements in the USA. It is perhaps appropriate to use this particular cultural gimmick for 'drama' - as opposed to parody, in the eponymous context of "charged-water", and furthering the outlandish possibility of that particular brew (electrically charged water) being produced and used as a substitute fuel for automotive transportation and home power.

Anyway - the once-clever but now insufferable voice-over in this familiar Ad-theme, begins: and with a background camera shot panning a gentle rain on a mirrored country lane; then to a typical suburban home; and then to a close-up of its gurgling rain-gutter:

1) "Bucket of rainwater - ten cents"

Then camera pans to a corner of the family garage, wherein a stainless steel contraption resides (seeming to glow):

2) "Overnight water treatment - twenty cents"

Then the camera retreats to a sunny day and the soccer Mom cruising in the SUV filled with rowdy kids; a cell-phone glued to one-ear:

3) "Not stopping at the filing station - forty bucks saved"

and then the camera flashes to a beautiful Pacific sunset, with the denouement:

4) "Pure air and clean water" [pause for effect] "Priceless"


Ha! " in your dreams" ...that would be the first reaction, from the "establishment" lurkers on vortex...

MasterCharged water: is it pure science fiction: Jules Verne at his best? Hmm, maybe... perhaps the establishment is correct (they usually are) but how often is Jules-jilted?

Here is how they (the Don Lancaster tunnel-blinded clones of the world) could be wrong -and yet - with all our cherished laws of physics still intact. It is not magic, just a prior failure to look in the right places.

... And for that explosive touch of television overkill, we will add the voice-over: "we know drama" effect, which comes from you-know-who (TNT), as the use of such a fuel will involve making water into what is most accurately called an "exploding capacitor", not a "real fuel" but who cares?...

...and returning to our TV set, and the camera-shot of the glowing orange sunset... then- enter stage-left: Randy Mills, and stage-right: the reinterpreters of Randy Mills, and our host, James Burke, Jr. trying to explain to the PBS audience how all of this came-to-be "connected."

The solar-derived hydrino-hydride, if it exists ... and Randy says it does, who are we mortals to argue ... is likely to be many wonderful things not anticipated by Mills himself, say his reinterpreters. Including the fact that a small percentage of rain-water, and a larger percentage of the oceans, and the so-called "fair weather" field, and core-heating of earth, and even the pervasive "dark matter" of the Cosmos [in that every star in the sky has been spewing them out for billions of years]: all of these are related directly to hydinohydride.

This species consists of a maximum enthalpy hydrino (n=1/16) and two electrons in a very tight, very stable arrangement. It is about 4000 times more compact than hydrogen on earth but cannot aggregate closely in space with other Hy- because it has net charge and a strong near-field. It can filter its way into matter, since it will displace an electron. For all practical purposes it **is** a heavy stable electron. As with hydrogen itself - there really is NO monatomic hydrogen in nature (on a sensory timescale) and there is no unhydrided hydrino, except for the limpid ones made in labs. Forget the lab-made variety, who needs 'em?

This species has a strong affinity for the positive end of an H-O-H molecule and will fall to earth as Hy-hydronium, in rainwater, or alternatively as carbonic acid with a Hy substitution - which is the likely way it enters our world in PPM or less quantities. Soon it will displace an electron somewhere and become truly "invisible". If a mass-spec were to be set up correctly, they could be detected, but if you think about it - most of these tools cannot be stet up correctly because this species was never considered to be possible before. Catch-22.

On earth this species, hydrinohydride, is little-more than a substitute electron and is totally hidden in other atoms, and will slowly accumulate over geologic time in the oceans, but eventually migrate to the heavier elements, especially iron. Most of solar-derived hydrinohydride will have ended up in the earth's core, possibly providing the retained level of heating, upon its decay (pressure instigated decay). After decay, the reinflated hydrogen finds a carbon and becomes methane (of the non-bio-variety). However for an extended time, they are present in the ocean and especially in rain water in ppm quantities.

For the sake of argument, lets consider the possibility that rainwater has a small but usable proportion. Normal rainwater has a pH of 5.6 (slightly acidic). This is normally attributed to the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. The carbon dioxide gets dissolved in the rainwater and forms carbonic acid. However, as inasmuch as the Hy - [if it is a reality in nature'] - would strongly favor carbonic acid in the atmosphere, and immediately displace an electron there or attach to water vapor - so we can go on to suggest that a fair percentage of the small natural acidity of rainwater is due to solar-derived hydrinohydride.

Does that factoid, if true, set the stage for Act II of this series: "Priceless: the Saga of MasterCharged Water" ?

Stay tuned ... or set your spam filter appropriately.

Signed,

Harry F. Tuttle, a.k.a. El Filibustero

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