yeah, he had some tech to split the hydrogen molecules from the oxygen and use the gases as fuel. he used like a sonic or magnetic frequency to split the molecules in the water if i remember correctly.
Discussion
The patents are public, the tech was (and still is immature). He needed more money and time to fully develop the concept, it wasn't as simple as his videos made the process look. I wouldn't be shocked if someone did kill him though as the # of ppl who could actually dev this tech is so low and there's so much money to be lost from free energy.
So why hasn’t anyone developed a water engine then? It seems like you could make a ton of money.
Disagree tbh. There are efficiency issues that would need to be overcome. If you look at the car it's pretty light and the amount of water required to run it at a short distance at moderate speed is significant (this isn't what he says in the video but he's exaggerating because he's trying to get investors - he essentially called it a perpetual motion machine lol). He is converting water to hydrogen. In a way the hydrogen cars solve two issues: 1) space saving so you can store more fuel. 2) Allows big companies to get their beaks wet selling us fuel (that the govt can tax).
You can’t burn water for energy tho, that’s not how it works.
Did you miss the part where I said he was converting it to hydrogen?
I’m not a chemist but doesn’t distilling the individual elements produce energy?
Whacky stuff happens when you start playing with smol stuff like that.
nostr:npub1tsgw6pncspg4d5u778hk63s3pls70evs4czfsmx0fzap9xwt203qtkhtk4 is it possible to create energy by separating water into hydrogen and oxygen? How could this idea be integrated into an engine?
No.