Yeah, the
scam alarm bells are going off here.
Foil wrote:They're all over the internet, and they nearly all follow the formula:
- Video to show a car running, or "driving 150 miles on one gallon of water".
- Pseudo-scientific claims of success.
- Unverifiable claims of scientist support.
- Vague references to government or big-oil conspiracies to suppress their work.
- Upon closer investigation, claims that they've either found a way to violate the laws of Thermodynamic energy, or that the reaction is actually some kind of nuclear fusion.
... and the kicker that ties them all together...
- Invitation to inve$t in their special Physics-defying technology!
...You can't get more energy out than what you put in to obtain the hydrogen in the first place. And if you believe they've succeeded in a way to create a 'cold' nuclear fusion reaction in their machine... well, I have a bridge or two to sell you.
Seriously, guys. It seems like another one of these comes out every year or so, and all the conspiracy theories follow.
A few years ago, it was the
"Aquygen" videos all over the net. (A little research, and you can see it's just a variation of
Brown's Gas, with claims of nuclear reactions and/or breaking the laws of physics.)
A few years before that (and still occasionally seen in
'free energy suppression' sites), it was the death of Stan Meyer after he was
convicted of fraud relating to his "water car".
I'd say SuperSheep is right; this one appears to be a hydride battery-powered vehicle, advertised as some kind of breakthrough. With the energy issues becoming so prevalent recently, I'm sure we'll see quite a few more of these.