Expert is a relative term, a mantle that I am not arrogant enough to claim. I know as much as I do not and that ratio seems to stay balanced despite time and all efforts.
I am always very curious of water fuel ideas, but each to date has drawbacks for every advantage. Corrosion and reliability of engine components is now and will always continue to be the primary hurdle to a robust, viable, mass producible system. To be blunt, my focus these days is on low tech systems and approaches.... heat engines coupled with low RPM power generation. I've mostly abandoned ICE as a motive source and been looking to higher efficiency systems run on organic renewable fuel supplies. The holy grail being a viable off grid power and heating solution for the average sized suburban home in a typical metropolitan environment that doesn't draw any attention. Exotics are nice and intellectually stimulating, but generally will always get the 'dog head turn' look from the non-geeks within ear shot. Whatever is the agent of change is in our society, it has to be simple, understandable, and serviceable to survive and persist. It needs to appear initially non-threatening to the establishment to get a fledgling installation base but enjoy a dramatic ground swell popularity to force adoption and acceptance.... i.e. hybrid cars. Just my 2 cents. -john ----Original Message----- From: Jones Beene [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, July 19, 2006 11:17 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [email protected] Subject: [Vo]: RE: BAM -- Hey John, You are an ICE expert, no? Are you not tempted to try a HydroBooster, with or without treated water? Jones BTW Michel - the solubility of H2 in H2O is very low: See item 33 on this page: http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/water/explan4.html Had not Michel asked for short posts, I would have given the executive summary of that page ;-) --- John Steck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > That's like asking the sun to dim a little cause > it's too bright in the > morning... 8^) > -----Original Message----- > From: Michel Jullian > Jones (please kindly try to make your posts > shorter!) I was not thinking of > H2 nanobubbles but of _dissoved_ H2 AND O2 (no > bubbles at all, not even pico > or femto).

