I am looking for someone who can build or furnish a Sphere Water Heater large enough to heat the water need to heat a home of 200 m?.
The type seen on the Youtube video that uses ultrasonic energy or a chain reaction.
A believe it is referred to as the FREE ENERGY WATER HEATER.
Of course I would like to know the cost.
You can contact me at barrymore@free.fr
Thanks
I believe it's a fake. Maybe it is not. Anyway who knows something more?
Here is the video.
http://www.youtube.com/v/ZxnEQssJ4FQ&hl=en&fs=1
Quote from: Megla on November 01, 2008, 09:46:49 PM
I believe it's a fake. Maybe it is not. Anyway who knows something more?
Here is the video.
http://www.youtube.com/v/ZxnEQssJ4FQ&hl=en&fs=1
I don't think it's a fake, and no you can't buy it.. This guy is looking for money to manufacture these, but obviously that ain't happening anytime soon. I don't believe anyone here knows how its done, or else they would've done it..If you could produce this much heat with that amount of power you could use thermoelectric generators and make it run itself.
hi
it is possible to do, i am currently working on a few projects including one of these heaters. the heater started out as an attempt to produce hho although i succeeded in doing this it was more efficient to use it as a heater as described in the youtube video.
i am currently working on a small heater that will hopefully be used as a room heater. to look at the heater it looks like an oil filled radiator.
i also have plans to build a large heater using a 1 metre diameter sphere. that should be able to heat a house with very little or no power input.
If you send about $$$ 250 DONATION only, to the company advertising the sphere heater, you get the plans for free! It's a legal loophole to keep people out of trouble. No parts sales. Read company policy again.
Research Viktor Schauberger
The technology is not a hoax, though not many understand how to replicate it.
It was an experiment on Resonance.
Quote from: Megla on November 01, 2008, 09:46:49 PM
I believe it's a fake. Maybe it is not. Anyway who knows something more?
Here is the video.
http://www.youtube.com/v/ZxnEQssJ4FQ&hl=en&fs=1
Video not available.
It sounds similar to the Peter Daysh Davey heater. Tuning the device is much harder than it looks. I never succeeded.
The unit is most probably an oscillator hooked to an AC amplifier hooked to central electrode, with outer metal shell as opposite electrode. The tap / distilled water unit, as dialectic between plates, makes a "water capacitor" , and everyone knows that a small capacitor has it's own self resonant frequency. The water molecules then vibrate producing heat, as continuous reaction increasing. Look up methods of industrial "liquid float level measurement" of vats of liquids. They use the resonant frequency method which corresponds to the level of fluid. The Stan Meyer type process years ago in Ohio used it to make steam heat. Many Patents regarding Hydrogen generation. At low power level input, his water tank vessel would not freeze in winter. Farmers way years back , used to put hose in winter ponds hooked to running air compressor. The bubbling action vibrations kept molecules water bumping into each other for heat friction. The ponds stayed open in winter land. The firm displaying the sphere water heater demonstration accepts approximately open $250 donation, and the plans are free - not sold. Read their plan.
It's clearly WITTS heater, already discussed here in other places too.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oZoiY3FvxKo
https://www.witts.ws/verifications/
Quote from: Hydro-Cell on December 11, 2008, 02:43:06 PM
i also have plans to build a large heater using a 1 metre diameter sphere. that should be able to heat a house with very little or no power input.
Thanks for sharing!
I believe you succeeded in heating the ball, successful OU, so you will make a bigger one.
Thank you!
Another 15 years have passed.
... ...
Quote from: nix85 on June 07, 2023, 04:37:43 PM
It's clearly WITTS heater, already discussed here in other places too.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oZoiY3FvxKo
If the ball contains water is 1.7 gallons, it may be 6.44 (or 7.72) liters.
If the ball is full of water, it may be 14 liters.
In the video, the water temperature in the ball rises by 46 degrees Celsius (184F-101F) over a period of 2 minutes.
The current of the 9V battery = 0.18A, the power = 1.62W.
Conventional heating of 6.44 liters of water and raising it by 46 degrees Celsius requires a continuous input of 10.1kW in 2 minutes.
Quote from: panyuming on June 15, 2023, 10:10:40 PM
If the ball contains water is 1.7 gallons, it may be 6.44 (or 7.72) liters.
If the ball is full of water, it may be 14 liters.
In the video, the water temperature in the ball rises by 46 degrees Celsius (184F-101F) over a period of 2 minutes.
The current of the 9V battery = 0.18A, the power = 1.62W.
Conventional heating of 6.44 liters of water and raising it by 46 degrees Celsius requires a continuous input of 10.1kW in 2 minutes.
Duh. I shared that EXACT same calculation here years ago.
Quote from: nix85 on June 15, 2023, 10:30:11 PM
Duh. I shared that EXACT same calculation here years ago.
Thanks for sharing! Very encouraging data. Apparently an OU device.
Quote from: panyuming on June 16, 2023, 12:40:05 AM
Thanks for sharing! Very encouraging data. Apparently an OU device.
You're welcome. Encouraging data indeed. No doubt it's an OU device.