[Stoves] Re Alexis Belonio article
Crispin Pemberton-Pigott
crispinpigott at gmail.com
Wed Apr 4 08:29:45 CDT 2007
Dear Friends of Science
>>Meyers was proven to be one of the biggest scam artists on the planet.
>>Please do not be taken in by any of his work.
>Now, now, Meyers has many contenders for this "honor", with people
>like Daniel Dingel who claimed to be a NASA engineer but didn't know
>what an explosion was.
Well, I have read a few patents on the issue of bombarding water with radio
waves at particular frequencies and noting there is an increase in the
efficiency of electrolysis. Someone by the name of Garth
Whitworth-Williams-Foxcroft (which makes my name look short) who you are
very unlikely to have heard of but whose inventions you use every day was
working on this technology recently for his electric powered hydrogen
engine. His single cylinder engine is working fine and makes no claims for
100%+ efficiencies. It is just that a 135 hp hydrogen fueled internal
combustion engine is far lighter than a 135 hp electric motor. Therefore it
is more efficient to manufacture hydrogen on board (from stored electric
power) than to haul around a huge motor. Garth's engine is so small he can
carry it around with his own two hands and he is over 90 years old. Garth
invented the viable zinc-air battery and photo-setting polymers, the
air-to-air missle and dozens of other things.
The interesting thing relevant to our conversation is that he reported
inconsistent but real increases of between 2 and 6 fold when using radio
waves in combination with electrolysis but that the effect was virtually
random. As far as I know he was not able to get to the bottom of why. For
sure the reason is a quatum effect.
All this answers not the question of whether there is any decomposition of
water in a stove fire at realistic temperatures, on the presence of various
species of carbon particles.
Thanks
Crispin
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