+xavier c government wouldn't stand in the way of such a product attempting to solve the issue. Why isn't charities like water aid all over this, why aren't any charity organisation even remotely interested? Frankly your talking utter bollocks.
+George Saunders Again like the guy above you said this an item for individuals. It doesn't produce enough water for a whole city. An example of government getting in the way is California. California is in a drought right now, but they could've prevented the shortages by building more reservoirs and damns and capturing rain water when it came down. This could've done in the last 20 years when they knew the population was growing. We also do hv water but environmentalists don't want California to use it because there's a fish called the delta smelt they want to preserve.
You need humid environment, which means in a desert. It is useless. This works like how in the summer time, water accumulates on the out side of a cool bottle. Not a scam.
The whole thing was a scam to get people's money. Nothing shown in this video was ever produced. It would be impossible for that small solar panel to produce that much water from the air.
There's tech to also extract moisture using the ground as it works like the ancient zeer pot fridge concept so the warmer air combined w/ the cooler ground would also condense moisture
Fake product. It cannot live up to its advertised fill rate. Most machines will need hundreds or thousands of watts to produce 2 liters of water in about 5 hours. This one claims they can do it in minutes for 2 liters. Its like saying you can live off of air and not need food and water.
Um. That's not feasible. To do that one would have to break molecular and atomic bonds which requires much more energy than this device in the video which only condenses moisture in the air.
@@scootergrant8683 couldn't you hypothetically use electrolysis to separate them on that level? Alexlab built a reactor that could do that, and it's actually super compact
It’s a dumb product. There is only so much water in the air by itself that it would have to be UNIMAGINABLY humid to even produce the slightest results. It won’t work inside and drier areas around the world that need water wouldn’t benefit from this product because there is little moisture in the air. Not to mention the other disgusting things in the air that can get you infections. Cool idea though.
Imagine if the maker of this makes a Scale Up design of that Machine, it doesn't need to be Drinkable the goal would be to use in Dried Farms that can't get water from the original water source they have been using.
How so. The laws of thermodynamics could be followed with this. It's not like they are trying to do this with a tiny button cell battery and hoping to succeed.
Depends I have no idea how much information you want. But the fact is it takes a lot of energy evaporate 1 litre of water and a lot of energy to condense 1 litre of water (depending on humidity). If you take a boiling kettle and losing a significant amount of energy to waste heat (the pot, air etc) imagine how much energy you've used to evaporate the water relatively quickly, its the same in reverse. Water is very stable it takes a lot of energy to break or form those chemical bonds no quick way of doing it. If you want to condense 1 litre of water its ambitious at best if you can do it within hours with that tiny Peltier device and a 1 foot solar panel. There is a base amount of energy required and it's relatively large, you can't get around this unless you break the laws of thermodynamics. No magic way of doing it, literally look at any other commercial condenser on Amazon for Watt hours needed.
@@Nekrotropik That all makes sense except you aren't breaking bonds when doing this. I understand it is on the bounds of impractical as in reality you'd be there for days. But I digress. When water is in the air it hasn't bonded to anything.
@@scootergrant8683 sorry you are correct about the chemical bonds, but regardless still takes alot if energy to condense water from air, and all these products find it truly impractical or impossible to do, all of them. That's why we don't have a single working way of making this work, I stand by my original statement.
@@Nekrotropik I'm not certain if it does or doesn't fail to fit laws of thermodynamics because I dont know if they really mean 1 cm of water in like 2 days but also we have no clue what sort of power source is running this. But yeah, on that scale it seems rather unlikely it could produce that much water XD
It’s a dumb product. There is only so much water in the air by itself that it would have to be UNIMAGINABLY humid to even produce the slightest results. It won’t work inside and drier areas around the world that need water wouldn’t benefit from this product because there is little moisture in the air. Not to mention the other disgusting things in the air that can get you infections. Cool idea though. Unfortunately the company went bankrupt due to these major issues with the product.
you cannot buy this, as the whole project was a complete sham. seemingly no actual prototype was made and the company went bankrupt almost 5 years ago now and no one’s gotten their money back and never will unfortunately.
It’s a dumb product. There is only so much water in the air by itself that it would have to be UNIMAGINABLY humid to even produce the slightest results. It won’t work inside and drier areas around the world that need water wouldn’t benefit from this product because there is little moisture in the air. Not to mention the other disgusting things in the air that can get you infections. Cool idea though.
sorry for the disappointment but the whole project was a sham, as the design was way too inefficient (actually even in the videos it was extreme wishful thinking ESPECIALLY considering how it works and the size of that solar panel lmao) and never had a working prototype. the company in question went bankrupt almost 5 years ago now and most of the backers still haven’t gotten a refund and sadly never will.