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Overunity Machines Forum



Linnard?s hydrogen on demand system without electricity !

Started by hartiberlin, October 04, 2005, 06:54:25 PM

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0 Members and 19 Guests are viewing this topic.

drspark

Hi,

I would use a grinder to clean the places I was going to braze or weld, or even try contact connections to, at-least sand paper.

Dave

ramset

RES I wonder if a simple HHo torch [browns gas etc] would do the job some amazingly hot temps claimed [for preheat braze and cool down ]  and you could build it yourself cheap     Chet
Whats for yah ne're go bye yah
Thanks Grandma

ResinRat2

Hi LC,

My electrodes are 1/4" diameter rods.

Right now I am finishing up drilling out the 60 holes in the plexiglass holder for my electrodes. I had to go up one step at a time in size with the drills, slowly increasing the sizes of each hole so as not to break and crack the plexiglass material.60 X 8 = 480 holes drilled, plus reaming them out. I am still not finished, but almost. Once those are done I can glue the frame together, then get going with the final assembly of the electrodes and silver solder. Then comes the glass pieces.

I'm getting  there, I'm getting there, ...  :P :P
Research is the only place in a company where you can continually have failures and still keep your job.

I knew immediately that was where I belonged.

ResinRat2

Hi Everyone,

I promised someone who PM'd me that I would post a picture of my T/C electrodes in the Plexiglass holder. You can see the silver solder wrappings around the bottoms of the electrodes. These will all be connected together and joined to the electrode that will be sticking out of the reactor through a rubber stopper. It took me a while to wrap them. Total of 60-70 eletrodes.

I know the solder could be subject to corrosion, but there is enough surface area, and I had no other alternative available to me, I have lost my patience and just want to get this unit into operation.

All I need to do is show overunity through my numbers of output and regeneration voltages.

Then I will let it run and run and run and see what happens.

Thanks everyone for your interest and patience.
Research is the only place in a company where you can continually have failures and still keep your job.

I knew immediately that was where I belonged.

dorro1971

hi rr.

why not make the base of you box out of alloy block,

drill blind holes for electrodes to sit upright in, located with grub screws....much the same as you have now.

then laquer the surface that will contact any liquid.

use flexible sealer on the alloy block to fix the sides to

now you have a good electrical connection AND exellent thermal transfer.

there may be something i am missing but i am only trying to help.

regards

dorro