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  2. Water power engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_power_engine

    A water power engine includes prime movers driven by water and which may be classified under three categories: [1] Water pressure motors, having a piston and cylinder with inlet and outlet valves: their action is that analogous of a steam- or gas-engine with water as the working fluid – see water engine; Water wheels [2]

  3. List of pseudoscientific water fuel inventions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pseudoscientific...

    This article attempts to list pseudoscientific inventions wherein common water is used to either augment or generate a fuel to power an engine, boiler or other source of power. This is not to be confused with legitimate inventions (such as hydroelectricity) in which the kinetic energy of flowing water is used for power.

  4. Water-fuelled car - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water-fuelled_car

    "Like Water for Octane," an episode of The Lone Gunmen, [53] is based on a "water-powered" car that character Melvin Frohike saw with his own eyes back in 1962. [54] The Water Engine, a David Mamet play made into a television film in 1994, tells the story of Charles Lang inventing an engine that runs using water for fuel. The plot centers on ...

  5. Water engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_engine

    The water engine is a positive-displacement engine, often closely resembling a steam engine with similar pistons and valves, that is driven by water pressure. The supply of water is derived from a natural head of water , the water mains , or a specialised high-pressure water supply such as that once provided by the London Hydraulic Power Company .

  6. John Ernst Worrell Keely - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Ernst_Worrell_Keely

    John Ernst Worrell Keely (September 3, 1837 – November 18, 1898) was an American fraudster and self-proclaimed inventor from Philadelphia who claimed to have discovered a new motive power which was initially described as "vaporic" or "etheric" force, and later as an unnamed force based on "vibratory sympathy", by which he produced "interatomic ether" from water and air.

  7. Aeolipile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aeolipile

    A fire is ignited under a cauldron, A B, (fig. 50), containing water, and covered at the mouth by the lid C D; with this the bent tube E F G communicates, the extremity of the tube being fitted into a hollow ball, H K. Opposite to the extremity G place a pivot, L M, resting on the lid C D; and let the ball contain two bent pipes, communicating ...

  8. Screw turbine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Screw_turbine

    A screw turbine at a small hydro power plant in Goryn, Poland. The Archimedean screw is an ancient invention, attributed to Archimedes of Syracuse (287–212 BC.), and commonly used to raise water from a watercourse for irrigation purposes. In 1819 the French engineer Claude Louis Marie Henri Navier (1785–1836) suggested using the Archimedean ...

  9. Water fuel cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_fuel_cell

    The water fuel cell is a non-functional design for a "perpetual motion machine" created by Stanley Allen Meyer (August 24, 1940 – March 20, 1998). Meyer claimed that a car retrofitted with the device could use water as fuel instead of gasoline. Meyer's claims about his "Water Fuel Cell" and the car that it powered were found to be fraudulent ...