Water for Gas – Believable or Scam?
Looking at the balance in which the world finds itself at the moment, it is hard to say what the effect would be if someone managed to produce a way of effectively providing greater fuel efficiency in the average automobile. Certainly for the consumer it would create a situation where gas bills would fall dramatically, but how would it affect the oil producing economies of the world? If you were to listen to some of the less circumspect commentators currently out there, this is the very reason why absolutely real systems that increase the fuel efficiency of family automobiles have not yet seen the light of day. They are being suppressed in order to maintain the status quo ' or so some would have us believe.
It is not a simple matter to find out the effectiveness of these systems. One of the more prominent ones in existence is the 'Water4Gas' plan which promises to give the purchaser all the information he or she needs in order to make their fuel tank more efficient and cut their gas bills radically. In this case, as in many others, the plan gives to anyone who signs up a list of instructions for anyone who wants to put together a device which will turn water from H2O into HHO, with the result that its fuel burns more efficiently and with fewer emissions. Therefore the environment benefits from cleaner air and the motorist benefits from less fuel expense. But does it really work?
Among the many products on sale which make the same claims, more than a few run up against Web of Trust software designed to alert Internet users to scams on the web. Reading through the comments made by users of this software, opinion is divided. Some people give the site and the plan a big thumbs up, saying that the only people who could have a problem with it are gas company bigwigs and rogue Middle East states. This level of hysteria does not do the product or the initiative much good ' especially when there are whispers from even the skeptical side of the web that this whole system might have something going for it. Few people are suggesting that it has all the answers, but there are enough people saying that it could be something to keep an eye on.
The difficulty with buying anything from the Internet before putting it to the test is that anyone can create false testimonials saying that their product is definitively the best thing they have ever seen and that now all their family are using it too. It is easy to make bold claims, and equally easy to put up a site saying that everything that company are saying is fraudulent. The only way to have any real confidence in what you read is to take as broad a range of information as you possibly can and judge from an informed read of all of it. Can water be turned into gas, or at least make the gas that is there more efficient? Some people seem to think it could work in certain situations ' but the technology is, as yet, imperfect. Time will tell whether those wrinkles get ironed out.


