Mixent said on Thu, 11 Feb 2010 13:36:58 -0800
[snip]
Nevertheless I was pleased and surprised to note that he made the connection
with the HHO stuff.
[/snip]
Robin,
Yes, and that was just one of several disparate fields he pulled
together - I was impressed by how well he stated his case in non technical
terms, I think his grass roots message is reaching critical mass.
[Snip from Ireport ]
At another level, the discovery of the hydrino is perhaps a validation of
oxyhydrogen researchers who have long claimed the presence of a heretofore
inexplicable energy source in hydrogen catalysis that produces increased
energy during or after electrolysis, when oxyhydrogen is burned in internal
combustion engines. That energy has been the foundation for a little-known
and much-abused industry surrounding oxyhydrogen, or HHO, where hydrogen is
produced on demand in small, engine-mounted kits called HHO generators (or,
incorrectly, fuel cells) used as a fuel supplement to increase power and gas
mileage and eliminate emissions from cars and trucks. Metals and chemicals
that also form a part of the BlackLight catalyst is applied as a coating to
titanium HHO plates to isolate a supposedly purer form of hydrogen.
The presence of a previously unknown form of energy was frequently inferred
by HHO researchers from the amazing scalability of oxyhydrogen welding
torches. Those can be scaled from a few hundred degrees to whatever
temperature melts a given metal, without any further adjustments by the
welder. Where does that ability to scale from 300 degrees to 10,000 degrees
come from?
[/snip]