There’s a lot of water in the air. It rises from the surface of the oceans to a height of almost 100 kilometres. You feel it in high humidity, but there’s almost as much invisible moisture in the air above the Sahara or the Nullarbor as there is in the steamy tropics. The water that pools beneath an air-conditioned car, or in the tray under an old fridge, demonstrates the principle: cool the air and you get water. And no matter how much water we might take from the air, we’d never run out. Because the oceans would immediately replace it.

Trouble is, refrigerating air is a very costly business. Except when you do it Max’s way, with the Whisson windmill. Until his inventions are protected by international patents, I’m not going to give details. Max isn’t interested in profits – he just wants to save the world – but the technology remains “commercial in confidence” to protect his small band of investors and to encourage others.

- bill 1-31-2007 5:28 pm

Great link!
I couldn't help noticing, on the same page as this article is another written by the same author -"Rooty Hill meets Titty Bong". Hilarious!
- Justin (guest) 2-01-2007 7:34 pm [add a comment]


thx but, truth told i got it by following the link on this post.
- bill 2-01-2007 7:38 pm [add a comment]





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