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That's a really good point and relates to a lot of the mind bending physics that seems to take place, namely implosive forces allowing for fusion to take place between and within materials. I HIGHLY recommend the Brown's Gas books by George Wiseman of Eagle Research. Aside from the interplay between the two main gases, there can apparently be varying ratios of expanded, diatomic and mono-atomic hydrogen and oxygen, each with different properties and energy potentials. Maybe if the PURE gases are made, they might have the desired results without needing Ozone. The thing that irks me most on the topic is that A LOT of the good stuff gets taken down. There was a fantastic multi part exploration on the properties of Brown's gas just for Welding by the second water car fella on here, but I haven't been able to find them, only snippets, for a few years now. My favorite of all time though, was a video of bunch of kids who made a miniature lighter out of a mason jar that ran on water and a 9V battery. Apparently took them over 300 attempts but they got it in the end. This is my pre-watch-the-video rant.... one sec....

So Cool!

And an Easy way to fix the Ozone hole (which is still healing, I hear) but the catch would be getting it up there. There is ground Ozone, but the really high up stuff might need to be made while flying near. Nice side gig for Satellites maybe?

Also makes me wonder though, about the different gases already being made and energy states they might be in. If the ratio between H and O are off by more than 5% it can be explosive instead of implosive, which is how the welders are able to achieve such crazy feats. Ionizing O2 into O3 could already affect that balance. What happens to Hydrogen when it gets ionized? H3? How to tell it's proper HHO and not just a soup of H and O? Getting the gases excited enough to become monoatomic while keeping the bond between H and O is how they SNAP back together when ignited, I thought. O2 FOOFS and H2 POPS but HHO collapses in an even sharper sounding SNAP.