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To: go-dubya-04

“Here’s the deal: I was an Economics major and not a brilliant chemist. From my understanding, RF waves are not the same as electricity. Correct me if I am wrong on that.”

I too am an Econ major (long time ago).

Just how do those RF waves get created? Could there be some electrical source doing that? Or, are those RF waves just coming from the sun or somewhere else “free”?

I’m hoping that someday someone figures out that if you drop some common metal into the solution, it will do the work for us. However, if such a thing exists, we’d see mass discharges of O2 and H2 whenever that stuff got wet in the wild.

Bottom line — no matter how you break apart those little atoms, it takes energy. And, it takes more energy to break them apart and to promote combustion than we get when they’re recombined.


25 posted on 09/09/2007 8:55:41 AM PDT by TWohlford
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To: TWohlford
I’m hoping that someday someone figures out that if you drop some common metal into the solution, it will do the work for us. However, if such a thing exists, we’d see mass discharges of O2 and H2 whenever that stuff got wet in the wild.

That was posted about two weeks ago. Aluminum/gallium amalgam produces hydrogen when dropped into water.

I bet the first thing a bean counter would say is "Let's go read Alcoa's electric meter and see how many kWH it takes to make a pound of aluminum".

(Sinking feeling)

28 posted on 09/09/2007 9:02:02 AM PDT by Gorzaloon (Food imported from China = Cesspool + Flavor-Straw™)
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