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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 17 Guests are viewing this topic.

dorro1971

oh!

also forgot to mention that  the above method will prevent any contamination.



:)


dorro

loosecannon

good ideas dorro!

i was thinking about a conductive epoxy to hold all the silver solder in place and keep it one big piece essentially.
not sure if the epoxy would react with the liquid though. probably would.

RR,
(i understand that your patience is all but gone.LOL)

if nothing else, you should seal the connections at the base with some sort of silicon, caulk, whatever goop you think would work, but something to keep the silver solder wraps dry no matter what.
that should keep the connections from corroding or oxidizing, at least for a while.

just an idea,
good luck,
drilling those holes must've been quite a chore!
looks good!
LC

ResinRat2

Thanks people,

Actually you all gave me a good idea. I could use T/C rods across the bottom and rest the electrodes on top. Then I can eliminate the silver solder completely. I can hold it all together by just gluing a thin plexiglass piece across the bottom sides of the holders. Yes, that would be much simpler and I wouldn't have to worry about corrosion. Oh well, all that extra winding for nothing! LOL!  :D

I must say, I have wasted a great deal of time on dead-ended tangents.

That's the nature of research.  :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.

loosecannon

no dead ends, just lots of curves along the way.LOL

cool solution RR!

onward and upward!

PS- the more specs and pics you post of your materials and build; the more of us that can start doing our own and follow along!
i bet im not the only one interested in taking a few drawings to a glass shop!

thanks for all that you are doing RR,
LC

ResinRat2

Hi LC,

Yes, I changed the configuration of the holder. The silver solder is gone and now it is all tungsten rods. Some of the rods are horizontal, the rest are verticle. I'll post the pics when I get back home tonight. This should work out fine and now I can finish the assembly of the reactor. FINALLY!!!

Once the reactor is put together I'll post the pics and the diagrams with measurements. I think everyone is probably  waiting to see what kind of results I get. This stuff is not cheap, and no sense wasting money on something that may not pan out. I am personally disappointed of the high costs of the tungsten/carbide rods and the fuel cells. It really makes this expensive. Getting the glass parts cut and holes drilled was over $300 US dollars alone. Ouch! Along with the fuel cells that are several hundred dollars. A bit pricey; but costs will probably drop on these components in the future. Maybe.

Thanks for your interest and support.
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.