Why It’s Lit
Because this car turns casual tap water, salt water, and even snow into hydrogen fuel via electrolysis.
Believe It Or Not
Stanley Meyer’s water-fuelled car can drive from New York to Los Angeles on just 22 gallons (83 liters) of water.
Drop This Fact
On March 21st, 1998, Stanley mysteriously died. According to Stanley Meyer’s brother, Stephen, during a meeting with two Belgian “investors” at a restaurant, Stanley took a sip from his cranberry juice and then ran outside where he began violently vomiting. Stephen reports that Stanley’s dying declaration was, “They poisoned me.”
After months of investigation, officials concluded that Stanley died from a cerebral aneurysm and not of poison. Stanley’s free-energy invention received unwanted attention and visits from the government and foreign entities, including the Belgian investors who according to Stephen never said a word after finding out of Stanley’s death.
“I told them that Stan had died and they never said a word,” he recalled, “absolutely nothing, no condolences, no questions. I never, ever had a trust of those two men ever again.”
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