There's a really simple toy boat that uses a coil of copper tubing heated by a candle to propel itself, and you can make HHO gas by splitting the hydrogen and oxygen in water apart by running a direct current thru it. You can try both by putting a candle and copper wire coil on a toy boat and running a 9 volt battery thru a cup of salt water. So the idea is to burn that collected hydrogen and oxygen together to heat the copper coil instead of the candle.-- silentman, Jun 17 2010 Hydrogen and Oxygen from Water http://www.youtube....watch?v=OTEX38bQ-2w [silentman, Jun 17 2010] Putt Putt or pop pop boat powered by candle http://www.youtube....?v=semJQYDk83M&NR=1 [silentman, Jun 17 2010] You'd do far better to run an electric motor from the 9V battery directly, but + for the remembrance of Putt Putt Boats!-- csea, Jun 17 2010 How long would you have to run the 9V battery electrolysis plant to produce enough HHO for a single pop?
Still, + for uneccassery and complex modification to a beautifully simple design.-- Twizz, Jun 17 2010 I was given a putt putt boat six months ago and it's still sitting on my shelf. I suspect now is the time to fire up and introduce it to the kids.-- wagster, Jun 17 2010 Make sure it hasn't seized up, or it will be a putt putt, bang boat-- xenzag, Jun 17 2010 Think of the volume of fuel in a candle compared to a comparable volume of hydrogen. I think the hydrogen will not make things very hot.-- bungston, Jun 18 2010 Because of this idea, when I was in an auto parts store in Los Angeles today to buy car wax I actually found myself looking around at small coils of copper tubing for thermostatic controls and thinking, "I could totally make a putt-putt outboard motorboat with this!"
Thanks for the brief return to childhood, [silentman].-- jurist, Jun 18 2010 random, halfbakery