Disperse the Myth: Cars Can Run on H20
Did you ever hear of the run your car on water hoax? For those that have, how do you mix oil and water in the first place? Didn't these scam artists ever heard of oil spills? Does 'like dissolve like' ring any bells?
Nonetheless, this is not hoax. Not only is this not a hoax, but cars that run on water are fuel efficient, and are being used all around the world. In fact, car makers have known about it for nearly a century, but couldn't foresee any remarkable profit.
You see, every car company must patent their own engines - it's their innovation, their unique piece of showmanship. People shell out the asking price for particular cars with particular engines from particular companies, and in doing so, feed the money grubbing industry.
However, a piece of technology where the auto ran on HHO wouldn't be theirs to patent. If there are competitors pedaling merchandise cut from the same block, the market price goes down and companies aren't able to charge the prices they need to in order to procure profit. Indeed, if an industry can't meet its original production cost, they've made a crude mistake in the dog-eat-dog world of business.
So, if there is no profit, there is no magical automobile that can accomplish this. While H20 and liquid gasoline don't get along, the gaseous form of gasoline is real charismatic. Essentially, cars vaporize gasoline and the fumes explode from the exhaust. The device that allows your car to run as a hybrid that creates hydrogen gas that mixes with gasoline fumes for a fierce combustion that's more environmentally minded than a run of the mill car model.
Most modern engines waste more than seventy-five percent of gasoline, which is unfortunate in a global society where oil production is rumored to have peaked. Scientists may be correct in stipulating this device will use more energy than that created, but no matter how you view it, the device still works.
In fact, the device is capable of working at full capacity and can keep your vehicle in tip-top shape for the long haul. What happens is as follows: hydrogen is produced by using left over electricity from your fully charged car battery and uses it to maximum efficiency. Who said the impossible wasn't possible?
Who said human beings would never reach space? Who said cars can't run on water? Let's take a moment to scold them before moving on. If anything, people would not mind a device that allows H20 to aid in car performance. Statistics show that such devices are so popular that the average refund rate on a bestselling book addressing this 'hoax' was 1%.
As with anything, the people get what the people want, and then those people refer others. In a nutshell, a car running on water is all about promoting automobile proficiency.