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Burning water!

Started by CrAz3D, May 28, 2007, 02:59:01 PM

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AntiVirus

That's pretty cool.  As long as they don't go and head to the ocean for the salt water and instead make it themselves, that would be amazing and probably a hell of a lot cheaper.
The once grove of splendor,
Aforetime crowned by lilac and lily,
Lay now forevermore slender;
And all winds that liven
Silhouette a lone existence;
A leafless oak grasping at eternity.


"They say that I must learn to kill before I can feel safe, but I rather kill myself then turn into their slave."
- The Rasmus

CrAz3D

As long as they don't go to the ocean for salt water?

AntiVirus

Quote from: CrAz3D on May 28, 2007, 03:05:24 PM
As long as they don't go to the ocean for salt water?
Mmhmm.  Seeing that we can make it ourselves.  No reason to ruin a habitat.
The once grove of splendor,
Aforetime crowned by lilac and lily,
Lay now forevermore slender;
And all winds that liven
Silhouette a lone existence;
A leafless oak grasping at eternity.


"They say that I must learn to kill before I can feel safe, but I rather kill myself then turn into their slave."
- The Rasmus

CrAz3D

mk...but then demand for drinkin water goes way up, no?

AntiVirus

Quote from: CrAz3D on May 28, 2007, 03:11:52 PM
mk...but then demand for drinkin water goes way up, no?
No......  I don't drink salt water..  I don't see why the price of drinking water would go straight up.  Care to elaborate?
The once grove of splendor,
Aforetime crowned by lilac and lily,
Lay now forevermore slender;
And all winds that liven
Silhouette a lone existence;
A leafless oak grasping at eternity.


"They say that I must learn to kill before I can feel safe, but I rather kill myself then turn into their slave."
- The Rasmus

Sidoh

Wow, this is remarkable.  Very cool.

Quote from: AntiVirus on May 28, 2007, 03:07:11 PM
Mmhmm.  Seeing that we can make it ourselves.  No reason to ruin a habitat.

I think it'd be far more convenient to produce "artificial" saltwater anyway.  You'd get the desired concentrate, remove any worry of the presence of impurities and you wouldn't have to worry about hauling it across landmasses.

Quote from: CrAz3D on May 28, 2007, 03:11:52 PM
mk...but then demand for drinkin water goes way up, no?

Well, as the video mentioned, water is the most abundant resource on the planet.  As petrolium products, which are nowhere near as abundant as water, have been responsible for a large fraction of the energy in the world for the last several decades, I don't think it would have much of an impact on that.

I think you are right, though.  It would have some sort of impact on it.

Quote from: AntiVirus on May 28, 2007, 03:15:35 PM
No......  I don't drink salt water..  I don't see why the price of drinking water would go straight up.  Care to elaborate?

Because the fresh water to manufacture salt water has to come from somewhere...

CrAz3D

If you make salt water from water that isnt salt water then you're using water that is most likely from some sort of aquifer or plant that cleans water for drinking or to go back into the rivers.
If you just use ocean water then you just filter out the crap and use that.
If we use water that could possibly be used for drinking then supply of drinking water would go down and price go up.


this is just all wondering speculation stuff, I dunno

BigAznDaddy


Sidoh

Quote from: CrAz3D on May 28, 2007, 03:22:15 PM
If you make salt water from water that isnt salt water then you're using water that is most likely from some sort of aquifer or plant that cleans water for drinking or to go back into the rivers.
If you just use ocean water then you just filter out the crap and use that.
If we use water that could possibly be used for drinking then supply of drinking water would go down and price go up.


this is just all wondering speculation stuff, I dunno

It's hard for me to side on this, but I'd have to agree... I'd wager it has some affect on it.

rabbit

Where's the energy for the radio wave emitter come from?  And what about byproducts?  Stuff is made by burning other stuff.

Pshhhht.  I don't trust the guy.  He called water an element.

CrAz3D

Quote from: rabbit on May 28, 2007, 03:41:33 PM
Where's the energy for the radio wave emitter come from?  And what about byproducts?  Stuff is made by burning other stuff.

Pshhhht.  I don't trust the guy.  He called water an element.
Maybe you could have an alternator in the car that would be powerful enough to sustain the radio wave drain.

Also, the byproducts would be what, salt?...  Store it and then use it for food consumption maybe

ZeroX

I hope this gets put into effect. That would solve really Gobal Warming to some degree and Gas price wages.
Zeroforce
Zeroforce
Zeroforce





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mutsumibear: :D I know.
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zxdropoff: stfu
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iago

Quote from: Sidoh on May 28, 2007, 03:21:34 PM
I think it'd be far more convenient to produce "artificial" saltwater anyway.  You'd get the desired concentrate, remove any worry of the presence of impurities and you wouldn't have to worry about hauling it across landmasses.
Yeah, like dophins.

Super_X

Quote from: iago on May 28, 2007, 06:19:55 PM
Quote from: Sidoh on May 28, 2007, 03:21:34 PM
I think it'd be far more convenient to produce "artificial" saltwater anyway.  You'd get the desired concentrate, remove any worry of the presence of impurities and you wouldn't have to worry about hauling it across landmasses.
Yeah, like dophins.
That was the  secret ingredient, they really are burning the fat from the Dolphins, they just used the camera to decive us all. Just like magic tricks.