PDA

View Full Version : HHO to boil waterI'm sure this has been asked a hundred times I'm sure but.....



davelance01
08-11-2009, 08:46 PM
No one has given a straight answer on it.

Question:
Can I use HHO in a boiler to create steam to run a steam engine that turns a generator that produces the electric to run the hho generator?

If not, why? Has anyone tried it? Or is it just shut down because of theory?

Steam engines are very high torque which is what you need to turn a generator to create power, steam engines will run all day at 600 rpm which can be geared up to 1800 with no problem.

You can use wood to start the whole process then switch to hho after you start making power.

This is old proven technology why don't we use it? Is it just a matter of having a boiler and a steam engine that stops most people or what?

I think it would work but of coarse I would rather learn from other peoples mistakes and money. Any intelligent thoughts or ideas are welcome.

Thanks for reading
Dave

Roland Jacques
08-12-2009, 11:35 AM
No one has given a straight answer on it.

Straight answer --------------NO--------------


If not, why? Has anyone tried it? Or is it just shut down because of theory?



Its shut down because of "Laws", not theory's. The Law is of thermodynamics.
You loose energy in each step. So if you start out at 1000watts of electricity (energy), to make HHO you'll produce the equivalent of 700 watts of HHO. then that HHO may produce 500 watts of steam...and so on, and so on at each step.

davelance01
08-13-2009, 11:41 PM
I also think that that is correct, but, what if the 500 watts of steam would have enough force to push the generator to 1000 watts then it would work. Steam produces enormous amounts of torque and hp, ie: they either push the piston or blow up. Thats where I believe the law is broken.

HHOhoper
08-14-2009, 04:20 PM
If you can pull it off, I guarantee you have a Nobel Prize waiting for you....

biggy boy
08-30-2009, 12:54 PM
If you can pull it off, I guarantee you have a Nobel Prize waiting for you....

Or a bullet in his head for finding something to shut down the oil companies and the rich crude oil producers.

HHOhoper
08-31-2009, 01:50 AM
:p Ha, ha, probably!

Nick1234
09-03-2009, 09:26 PM
I also think that that is correct, but, what if the 500 watts of steam would have enough force to push the generator to 1000 watts then it would work. Steam produces enormous amounts of torque and hp, ie: they either push the piston or blow up. Thats where I believe the law is broken.

It's a bit like nuclear energy. Uranium is enriched, that takes a certain amount of energy. After a completly different process is used, fission, to produce an enormous amount of energy.