A week or so ago, Yahoo had an ad on my homepage advertising about hydrogen conversions for cars. Where?

Lorraine V asked:


When I viewed the ad, it had a pix of a guy working under the hood of a car and the article described how much some of these kits cost, but that you could buy this kit for a lower cost. It also had where you could view a video. Please help me locate this ad.

Thank you.

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4 thoughts on “A week or so ago, Yahoo had an ad on my homepage advertising about hydrogen conversions for cars. Where?

  1. Kijk op " Water voor Gas". Het werkt eigenlijk en is het minste dure gesprek.

    Het is echt een brandstofsubstituut maar in feite geen verbrandingsversterker. Wikipedia heeft sommige goede artikelen op het concept en verscheidene universiteiten hebben gecontroleerde studies over de fenomenen gedaan.

    U zult vinden vele uitrustingen die duurder zijn met heel wat technisch opslokken -op:slokken-gook. Don' t koopt in het. Onderzoekt u meer meer u zult leren.

    Nadat u leest wat elk moet aanbieden, dan naar objectievere bronnen gaan

  2. In order to produce hydrogen gas, you must extract it from another substance, usually water. It takes energy to do this. Due to the second law of thermodynamics, it will always take more energy to produce the hydrogen than it in turn produces when it burns. In a self-contained automobile conversion, that extra energy comes from the gas you burn to charge the battery which powers the hydrogen extraction. They’re all scams. There’s no free lunch in this universe.

  3. Dit is niet wat u wilt, maar je zou willen lezen geen enkele manier. Maar je vindt de links die u wilt hier. hopen dat dit helpt.

  4. If you’re looking to convert honestly, YES it does work. I have done this to my 96 Saturn and currently get about 50 miles per gallon.

    I wrote a blog review about it here

    You can link to the various ones I tried from my blog.

    It’s very simple. You don’t change your engine or computer. A quart-size (95O cc) container is placed somewhere under the hood. You fill it with DISTILLED WATER and a little bit of BAKING SODA. The device gets vacuum and electricity (12 Volts) from the engine, and produces HHO gas (Hydrogen+Oxygen). The HHO gas is supplied to the engine’s intake manifold or carburetor as shown below.

    Hope this helps.

    King

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