Here is a summary of some new
watercar rebuilts from wasserauto.de forum
posted into the autobild.de
forum:
http://www.autobild.de/forum/showthread.php?s=4a9e5dffaa651176aaea012b2f6cf360&threadid=12123
Quote from: hartiberlin on May 13, 2005, 04:27:45 AM
Here is a summary of some new
watercar rebuilts from wasserauto.de forum
posted into the autobild.de
forum:
http://www.autobild.de/forum/showthread.php?s=4a9e5dffaa651176aaea012b2f6cf360&threadid=12123
It is for the person who can not read german realy bad. If you use an electrode from titanium as kathod than the electolysis is muche better but titanium is not funktion as anod.
rensseak
Quote from: rensseak on May 13, 2005, 10:37:00 AM
It is for the person who can not read german realy bad. If you use an electrode from titanium as kathod than the electolysis is muche better but titanium is not funktion as anod.
rensseak
Why not? It conducts.
Quote
Why not? It conducts.
Quote
Good question, next question. ::)
Yes, titanium is a conductor and I do not know why only as cathode. That is what I have experienced.
rensseak
Quote from: rensseak on May 13, 2005, 04:43:53 PM
Good question, next question. ::)
Yes, titanium is a conductor and I do not know why only as cathode. That is what I have experienced.
rensseak
Could it be that it's conducting just fine but that an anode produces oxygen instead of hydrogen? The cathode delivers twice as much gas because there is twice as much hydrogen as oxygen. Perhaps?
Quote from: rlm555339 on May 13, 2005, 10:04:03 PM
Quote from: rensseak on May 13, 2005, 04:43:53 PM
Good question, next question. ::)
Yes, titanium is a conductor and I do not know why only as cathode. That is what I have experienced.
rensseak
Could it be that it's conducting just fine but that an anode produces oxygen instead of hydrogen? The cathode delivers twice as much gas because there is twice as much hydrogen as oxygen. Perhaps?
Mmmh, may be! The titanium cathode is producing hydrogen, that's right. If I use titanium as anode and cathode nothing will happen.
In the periodic system I read, titanium at high temperature absorbs much hydrogen. Could it be that then palladium is a better electrode because it absorbs much more hydrogen already at low temperature? Do you know if there is a alloy from this two metals?
regards
rensseak
rensseak
I think absorbing hydrogen is bad AND wrong
dadink??
thats me :)