Can Cars Run on Water?
By Admin on Dec 30, 2008 | In News, Auto Reviews | Send feedback »
Link: http://www.carreviewsonline.net/water_car.shtml
Everyone's trying to save the planet, and do it all in an economically beneficial way. We have all kinds of hybrid cars, electric vehicles, hydrogen-powered cars and low-emission diesel automobiles coming out every year. Still, all of these have some sort of reliance on external, and eventually costly fuel sources.
In June 2008, a Japanese car manufacturer Genepax released a prototype vehicle claiming they're going to save the ozone with this revolutionary technology—water. The mysterious big gray box that powers this little H2O auto has stirred some controversy among experts and consumers alike.
If cars can run on water, or even part water, why then aren't all of the big vehicle manufacturers (GM, Toyota, Honda, Nissan, Chrysler, Ford) on board and investing in that technology? What's missing here?
The vehicle technology claim to extract chemical energy directly from water, a process which would violate the first and/or second laws of thermodynamics. Last anyone checked, the laws of thermodynamics haven't changed. So the primary question looms: How did Genepax get their little blue "water-fueled" car to actually go?
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