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Overunity Machines Forum



Friction heater running in my house

Started by oilpiggy, October 31, 2012, 02:25:24 PM

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oilpiggy

Here is the heater setup and running,  I am planning on adding 6 more drive discs for testing, Take a look @ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ErDldDkQ7wE

How do I test the heat out put again in water ?

I am a little more set up for testing now.  ;)


DaS Energy

Quote from: oilpiggy on December 12, 2013, 11:35:47 AM
Here is the heater setup and running,  I am planning on adding 6 more drive discs for testing, Take a look @ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ErDldDkQ7wE

How do I test the heat out put again in water ?

I am a little more set up for testing now.  ;)

Water will absorb 100% heat. By placing your heater in water of a known temperature for a known time you will both discover the heat output (max) of your heater and the wattage needed to achieve, this then can be compared to electrical element heating.

Paul-R

Quote from: DaS Energy on December 13, 2013, 04:27:27 AM
Water will absorb 100% heat. By placing your heater in water of a known temperature for a known time you will both discover the heat output (max) of your heater and the wattage needed to achieve, this then can be compared to electrical element heating.
Of course, you will need to know the volume of the water (or its weight).

oilpiggy

So
set volume of water,
start temp of water,
water temp rise over time and power taken for that rise. ?

So if I use 1 U.S. gallon and the heater runs at around 500 watts, how much temp rise should I get over over what time?
How much does 1 watt heat? or should it heat?

DaS Energy


Volume is one gallon (Am). Your competing against electric element that takes 790KW one hour to heat tank water 1*C, or 375KW  1*F.  For further reference see Wattlow.