PostHeaderIcon Run Your Car on Water - A Clickbank Product Study

Does anyone remember the kits you could buy from advertisers in the back of comic books? I can’t remember exactly what some of them were now, but I do remember saving up money when I was a kid only to get some plans and realizing that I was never going to get all the bits and pieces I needed to build the contraption. Or maybe you read or still read Popular Mechanics. I always like dreaming of building some of these things but never really did.

Lately, in the Clickbank Marketplace there have been multiple versions of the "Run Your Car on Water" information packages. At first, I noticed one or two. Today I went to Clickbank and searched for "water gas" and came up with now less than 14 products:

Obviously, the current price of gas has triggered this trend in Clickbank products. But I wanted to see what was actually involved with all of these products. If all you need to do to convert your car to burn water was buy an ebook, than wouldn’t everyone be doing it. Just how much more cost is involved after the ebook is on your hard drive. I mean, I could buy a book on how to build a nuclear reactor for $50. That does not make the building of it any easier since the steps after buying the book are the most expensive. And that is if the technology works in the first place.

Stanley Meyer

A discussion of water fueled cars is not complete without Stanley Meyer. In 1996, he claimed to have built a car that ran purely on water. He could never prove this claim and ended up refunding his investor’s money. He died in 1998 and conspiracy theorists claim that his death was not an accident. But a government coverup to prevent this technology from interfering with oil company profits.

Most of the books above mention using water as a booster, rather than the only source of fuel. So on we go.

HCNG and Hydrogen Fuel Enhancement

This is a technology where hydrogen gas is added to the fuel and air mixture of the car in the intake manifold. This has been shown to decrease gasoline consumption by up to 50% while at the same time reducing emissions. And although some power is required to produce the hydrogen from water, the savings is still there. Supposedly this is an easy upgrade to a car requiring only minor modifications. And this sounds like what is being offered by the products above. Most claim you can complete the modifications for under $100. Read more about Hydrogen Fuel Enhancement.

So it seems that these books are based on valid technologies, but what remains to be seen is if they deliver on their claims. Most are around $50 and if the claim of $100 in supplies is right, it might be worth an experiment. But you have to factor in the fact that this process involves hydrogen production and hydrogen itself is more explosive and dangerous that gasoline. Anyone remember the Hindenburg. This is not a duct tape and bailing wire project, although some of the HHO generators pictured seem to have similar contruction materials.

After doing a copyscape check of these product pages, I found that most are copycats of Water4Gas which was one of the first products to hit the Clickbank Marketplace. It will definitely not be the last with gas prices being the way they are.

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4 Responses to “Run Your Car on Water - A Clickbank Product Study”

  • Pedro says:

    My doubt is whether this product really works!

    What are we going to have next? Run your car on air…?

  • J.B. says:

    I’ve tried the manual from the Water Fuel Expert and it has definitely worked with my car. My mileage within a week went from 19 to 32 mpg. I’m saving a lot of money every month because of the info provided here.

  • billeater (1 comments.) says:

    I can’t speak to better gas mileage, but I do have a water injection system on my 1991 Galant VR4. It’s a turbo-charged car produced for the rally scene. With modified turbo cars, many racers use water ( or alchohol ) injection to spray a fine mist into the air intake. Cooling the air that’s being pulled into the intake of the engine allows them to increase the pressure of the turbo without the side-effect of pinging and knocking. It’s the same principal that “Nitrous” uses.

    Cooler air/gas mix == more efficiency.

    So, it does seem plausible that injecting the water mist would improve gas mileage. I suppose the question is whether it improves it enough to make a measureable difference.

  • Stephan Miller says:

    I would think just water would add too much to gas mileage. If the generator worked as it’s supposed to, the water is supposed to release Hydrogen.

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