Hydrogen Hybrid Engine


Water For Gas

Hydrogen Car Conversion

Run Cars On Water

Hydrogen Hybrid Engine

Hydrogen Fuel Generator

Hydrogen Hybrid Engine, The Other Hybrid

 

 

With gasoline cost at an all time high, consumers are looking towards alternative fuels to run their vehicles on. There is a lot of talk about hybrid engines, mainly a mix of gas engines and electric motors. But what about another system? How about a hydrogen hybrid engine?

A hydrogen hybrid engine runs on gasoline like a conventional engine, in fact it is a conventional engine – with a small conversion. A conversion you can do at home in about a weekend for under $100. The difference is that we add a hydrogen generator or generators – depending on the size and type of engine – under the hood of the car. These generators produce enough HHO or Browns gas from water to aid the combustion of the gasoline, without losing any power.

The hydrogen generator is a container of distilled water with a tiny amount of baking soda added, that has two electrodes submerged. A small electrical current is run through the water via the electrodes, and the result is the breaking down of water into it's two elements, hydrogen and oxygen. This gas is known as Browns gas or HHO, and it actually burns better than gasoline. We are not going to run the engine only on Browns gas however. What we will do is use the engines vacuum to draw the HHO into the cylinders along with gasoline and ignited. The gasoline and HHO mixture burns much more cleanly, completely, and efficiently.

Owners of cars that have had a hydrogen conversion installed in their vehicle report anywhere from 15-75% increase in their gas mileage, with about 50% being the average.

These hydrogen hybrid engines use a HHO generator that you can build at home. There are quite a few sites online that provide you with the instructions you need to build your own generator and install it in your vehicle. All of these plans are basically the same thing with the exception of the electrical source. Most just use the direct current from your car battery, while there are other kits and plans that use an alternating current to break down the water into HHO at a better rate. Both systems work well.

The materials needed are readily available from pet supply stores (valves, tubing), auto parts stores (fuses, fuse holders, tubing) and hardware stores (jars, hardware). The only thing you may need to order is a device to fool your cars computer into thinking you are burning lower octane gas. On some engines, if you don't trick the computer, you will negate any savings you might realize.

If gasoline prices have got you down, but you don't have a ton of money to plunk down for an electrical hybrid car, check out the information available on hydrogen hybrid engines.

 

 

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