Although solar cells are VERY inefficient at converting water into hydrogen and oxygen, they happen to be FREE once installed (hence why I'm using it). The hydrogen is simply a means of saving the energy. The conversion of a 3.5 HP lawnmower engine was easy.
Simply remove the throttle body/carberator on the side of the engine and the fuel tank. Hook up a small 1/16 I.D. piece of steel tubing into the port where the carberator used to be (directly inserting hydrogen into the intake valve). The hydrogen is fed through a needle valve regulated to 5 psi max and at 2psi idle and directly into the port.
Spark plug timing is NOT required. You MAY change the spark plug timing (if you have the know-how) to ignite when the piston is at top-dead center in order to achieve greatest efficiency. But as I don't know how to do this, I've left it alone. The only way I've gotten the engine to run so far (since I haven't figured out a way to pressurize the hydrogen, nor found out what type of tank is suitable: someone told me you could use an old scuba tank up to a certain PSI...) is by hooking up a bunch of 2-liter bottles in parallel. Yet, this doesn't last very long and it doesn't use up all of the H2 in the 2-liters.
Therefore, I'm looking for a way to store the hydrogen that isn't metal hydrides since they are extremely expensive. Although pressurized would be dangerous for a car, I'm not nearly mechanical enough to convert a car. Therefore, the experiments here are done for conservation of energy around my home, such as running an emergency generator off a lawnmower engine and cooking all of our food off of hydrogen. (Besides, we rarely drive our car if the weather is nice.) Ideally, I would like to find a way to keep the generator running for a longer amount of time, because the engine's exhaust (located beneath the carberator port) actually produces potable water (which would save on the water bill).
Therefore, if anyone has any suggestions, such as scuba tanks or compressor pumps, please let me know the specifics and I'll attempt them at my earliest convenience.
Thanks