Water as Fuel with Puharich and Meyer

With more than 300 million cubic miles of water on the Earth’s surface, it’s one of the most abundant substances on the planet. Water comprises two parts hydrogen and one part oxygen. When these gases are derived from water through electrolysis, they form a combustible gas. The exhaust produced by burning this gas is once again water.

The problem with water as a fuel is that water is already the exhaust of hydrogen combustion. How can one use the exhaust of combustion to produce combustion? It seems an impossible problem to overcome. We see this barrier in the observation that electrolysis requires far more applied energy than it yields as output. However, inventors in the early 1980′s began exploring and publishing claims of exotic, low power means for disrupting the covalent bonds that hold the water molecule together.

The man who first patented a form of this technology was Andrija Puharich. Incidentally, at the time Puharich filed his water fuel patent in June of 1981, he lived only a few miles from where I live today. His patent was titled “A Method and Apparatus for Splitting Water Molecules”, which he was granted on July 19th, 1983. You may review this patent by clicking here.

The key elements of Puharich’s setup are connected in series:
1) implementation to manage the waveform
2) an isolation transformer
3) a capacitor formed from insulated cylindrical plates using water as a dielectric
4) inductors placed serially on either side of the capacitor

Puharich Block Diagram

Puharich’s water fuel cell was arranged as follows:

Puharich’s water fuel cell

Puharich energized his cell with a low-frequency amplitude modulated AC waveform between 20 to 200 Hz carried on a frequency of between 200 to 100,000 Hz. In operation, the frequencies are tuned so that the capacitor, the water cell, is resonant with the Vss side inductor.

Puharich's AM waveform

This waveform is rectified by the water between the capacitor’s plates as the magnitude of polarization in the water increases through the operation of the cell.

Puharich rectified AM waveform

Shortly after Puharich was granted his patent, Stan Meyer began work along similar lines. I do not know for sure whether Meyer began his research after having read Puharich’s patent, but based on the chronology of the patent filings and the similarities in their approaches, I think it likely that Meyer’s work was directly based on Puharich’s. From 1983 until his death in 1998, Meyer was granted more than 15 patents as he continually improved upon his version of the technology. The most descriptive disclosure of Meyer’s basic approach comes from his 1990 patent which you may review by clicking here.

As with Puharich, the key elements of Meyer’s setup are connected in series:
1) electronics to manage the circuits energization
2) an isolation transformer
3) a capacitor formed from 304L stainless steel coaxial tubes using water as a dielectric
4) inductors placed serially on either side of the capacitor
5) a “blocking” diode placed on the Vdd side of the further inductor

Meyer's block diagram

Meyer’s water fuel cell was arranged as follows:

Meyer's water fuel cell

Meyer energized his cell with two square wave frequencies; a higher frequency tuned to the resonant frequency of the water cell (a capacitor) and the Vss side inductor, and a lower square wave frequency used to gate the resonant frequency at regular intervals to permit the step charging effect time to reset. The resulting waveform is a train of square pulses followed by a constant off-period.

Below is a diagram showing how Meyer used this waveform to step charge the water cell to such a degree that the water molecules are “winched” apart by the strong orientation effect of the increasing electrostatic field.

Meyer's waveform

The result is a low power effect that uses strong polarity to weaken and dissolve the covalent bond of the water molecule and so produces oxygen and hydrogen gases.

Splitting water

Below is a water capacitor I built while attempting to replicate Meyer’s technology.

Water capacitor

Below are measurements of the capacitance, resistance (and impedance) of the water capacitor in both dry and submerged states at various frequencies. See  below:

CRZ for dry WFC

CRZ for wet WFC

Below is a picture of the WFC mounted in tap water.

Coaxial water capacitor on 082610 @ 0730

Below is a 5 capacitor array.

Coaxial water capacitor array on 052310 @ 1823

In the following image, a pulse frequency of 2110 Hz and a gating frequency of 120 Hz was used.

WFC input waveform 082610-0730

The waveform output on the water capacitor looks as shown below:

WFC output waveform

The step charging on the water capacitor rose in this test to 715 volts. The cell made very light gas production while consuming a steady average of 1500 mW of power.

The gas generation shown in the video was produced with the high voltage and low current effect that Meyer described in his patents, at least as well as I could replicate it. Meyer referred to this effect as the Electrical Polarization Process. The capacitor shown is not producing very much gas but does at least seem to confirm the possibility of producing gas from water using a high voltage and low current approach. I do not own the expensive test equipment required to make careful thermodynamic measurements of the energy input and output, but my guess is that the energy one could yield by burning these gases would be less than the amount of energy spent deriving them. Still, given the apparent existence of Stan Meyer’s operational water-powered dune buggy, and given his claim about the Electrical Polarization Process as being a novel aspect of his invention, it would be worthwhile to make such measurements to verify Meyer’s claim of exothermicity in his water fuel cell.

.:.

Meyer’s Gas Core Transformer Mappings Between Meyer’s Hydrogen GMS Cards and Patent Schematics Operating Meyer’s VIC
View Comments
  • Hi Alex!
    I forwarded this dated message ( 2010 ) to Dan Winter and Paul Harris who work with frequencies
    of hydrogen and hydroxy. Maybe through collaboration effective hydrogen generation from
    small electrolizers will move this technology forward?
    http://www.fractalfield.com/fractalphotosynthesis/

    I see there is a crypto coin called “Hydro” devoted to the hydrogen industry.
    https://icobench.com/ico/hydrocoin

  • I was fortunate enough to have worked with Stan Meyers in his lab behind his house. He showed me how his system operated. I did the demos myself using tap water. I also observed the dune buggy operating. Stan informed me that he was starting to retrofit a Lear jet. I told him that it would certainly get the attention he craved but would also lead to his downfall. He would not listen and paid the price. Such a waste of a very smart man. Alex, you are on the right track…..keep pushing, as it is very “doable”.
    Regards

  • Hi Alex, my name is Jesus Labrador and I am from Venezuela. I am very happy to see your work, since like you, I have been investigating the effect of resonant frequencies in stan meyer cells for two years and your results are consistent with mine. This is my email: disertronicar@gmail.com. When you want, you can write to me and we exchange knowledge. Congratulations on your excellent work. Jesus Labrador.