IF it is such a revolutionary discovery, then why was it known about 85 years ago?
There is nothing revolutionary about the technology itself, not really. But what actually is a major change is the number of car owners that are discovering it, converting their automobile engines from gas to hydrogen and rebelling after 100 years of abuse from the oil industry and automotive corporations.
What abuse?
Well, as a primer, visit youtube.com and search for Lindsey Williams. He has some things to tell you about discovery of oil in Northern Alaska which became top classified because of criminal agreements between the US government and OPEC.
Also factor in that the comparative MPG between a car in 1908 and today is a deficit of 40%! If the oil industry and automotive corporations had done nothing, we would get improved MPG by 40% compared to what we do get.
Those scams and others besides have us facing the situation we are in today across the globeas regards the economy, wars, the environment, etc.
As I said at the outset, the Water4Gas device is a technology some 85 years old - we have official US patents from the 1920's which label this technology as the common knowledge of that era! What the device simply does is to add water vapor to the routine mixture of fossil fuel and air
There are those who say its origins stem from it being used in the fog of WW II, where it is said to have been employed against U.S. aircrafts during that war. One magazine at the time stated that as pilots flew their aircraft at low levels above the surface of the water, they sensed a considerable improvement in the power and performance of their engines. For reasons that remain unknown, the public have never been allowed access to this information.
What Water4Gas has done is researched today's technology and SIMPLIFIED the technology using readily available parts and materials, to bring you devices that are both very simple, very affordable and at the same time very POWERFUL. You have been looking for this for so long that you may have forgotten. But here it is.