What I cannot fathom is the utter reluctance of both car manufacturers and fuel companies to realize they are on a hiding to nothing with all their fancy new technology. When there has been a relatively simple solution that would reduce the consumption of hydrocarbon fuels by well over 75% and has virtually no pollution out the exhaust! It is Paul Pantone's GEET SYSTEM of induction which converts the fuel into a plasma prior to entering the engine! It can also use almost any liquid that contains CO2 such as carbonated soft drinks!
Sounds nice, any conversion of one type of energy to another can lose up to 10%, making Hydrogen from water to use in a hydrogen engine would need more energy than is produced to drive the hydrogen car. Is Toyota using an element (Metal) to react with water to split its hydrogen/oxygen from water? The mystery element in turn must erode during the conversion of water to Hydrogen. I`m sceptical of this claim.
And it will still need oil for lubrication, grease for wheel bearings, oil for tire production, oil for plastic production, and oil for a number of other things essential for the car to go down the road.
Toyota will go broke mucking around with this stuff ,They still need pistons and oil and have a lot of moving parts that needs servicing against full electric cars that don't have that problem,,
I have heard about someone trying to build a water engine many years ago in my younger days!😮
What I cannot fathom is the utter reluctance of both car manufacturers and fuel companies to realize they are on a hiding to nothing with all their fancy new technology. When there has been a relatively simple solution that would reduce the consumption of hydrocarbon fuels by well over 75% and has virtually no pollution out the exhaust! It is Paul Pantone's GEET SYSTEM of induction which converts the fuel into a plasma prior to entering the engine! It can also use almost any liquid that contains CO2 such as carbonated soft drinks!
NO. A car cannot run on water alone. There has to be something that acts on the water to move stuff.
Sounds nice, any conversion of one type of energy to another can lose up to 10%, making Hydrogen from water to use in a hydrogen engine would need more energy than is produced to drive the hydrogen car. Is Toyota using an element (Metal) to react with water to split its hydrogen/oxygen from water? The mystery element in turn must erode during the conversion of water to Hydrogen.
I`m sceptical of this claim.
And it will still need oil for lubrication, grease for wheel bearings, oil for tire production, oil for plastic production, and oil for a number of other things essential for the car to go down the road.
Toyota will go broke mucking around with this stuff ,They still need pistons and oil and have a lot of moving parts that needs servicing against full electric cars that don't have that problem,,
Steam