Brown’s Gas Generator – The Solution to High Gas Prices?
In the early 1970′s, a Bulgarian-born Australian scientist named Yull Brown discovered a way to use water as fuel. Using electricity, he was able to separate the hydrogen and oxygen in water. The result was a perfectly balanced gas that could be generated cheaply and safely. This gas is called “Brown’s gas.”
The idea of using water as fuel is not new. In 1875, Jules Verne wrote, “Water decomposed into its primitive elements…will then have become a powerful and manageable force. Yes, my friends, I believe that water will one day be employed as a fuel.”
Has that day come? Today, millions of Americans are converting their cars to run on a combination of water and gas. There are now dozens of different products you can buy that explain in great detail how to install a Brown’s gas generator in your engine. It not only saves gas, but it’s environmentally cleaner since it burns so much less fuel.
Yull Brown himself modified and drove a number of cars using a Brown’s gas generator. Once he was even officially monitored and found to have driven 1,000 miles on a single gallon of water.
The process of modifying a normal internal combustion engine to run on Brown’s gas is fairly simple. Basically, the carburetor must be replaced by a pressure reducer and throttle valve. Also, the engine must be re-timed because Brown’s gas has a higher flame speed than normal gas. And since the only product of Brown’s gas combustion is water vapor–which actually works to cool the engine–there’s no carbon build-up or corrosion. This also means there’s no pollution–the exhaust is simply warm steam.
The technology to “run your car on water” has been with us for a while. But it’s always been considered too expensive to be of practical value. That’s changed, however. Recently, some companies have produced very detailed yet clearly-written manuals that make it possible for a mechanically-minded layperson to install their own Brown’s gas generator. The price range for these manuals runs anywhere from $30 to $100.
When you think about it, Jules Verne predicted the inventions of helicopters, submarines, projectors, space travel, jukeboxes, and many other things. Now it appears he might have been correction about using water as a fuel as well!
