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Overunity Machines Forum



Scientist's/Engineers can you advise/help please?

Started by JimH, September 26, 2009, 02:07:13 PM

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JimH

Hi all,
I've built a 2 x tube hho dry cell - the inner tube has a insulated transition metal core - the outer tube has another type of transition metal clamped to it? I'm able to switch the power on and off at a 2/4 seconds interval without, (seemingly), loss of production... or so minimal I can't see it? Even the production looks far better than using plates - this is in rainwater (acidic, I know)... no other additives?
Can you look at this video & the others and advise please

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H7dmaoOHivQ

I hope this is the correct link, I'm not very good at this  ;D
Many thanks
JimH

Cloxxki

Nice set!

It should be hard to measure difference in gas production between continiously on, and your preferred on/off duty cycle pattern.
A sandwich bag placed over the top of the cell with an elastic band. See how low you need to fill it up. Don't pressurize, and be safe with sparks, of course. At your production rate now, a simple small plastic bag would do. I've seen a smarter setup with a tube and rising plastic bottle.
If you get more volume per second of "ON", you just may have something there. Next step would be to verify battery life each way, of course.
Might the seemingly small difference in short OFF moments be due to the bubbles still underway to the surface?

dankie

Hi ,

It looks like electrolysis to me , did you measure the gas ?

The real cool thing about HHO is that it works with GEET , much to discover still . It is like a free battery also . A resonant cell is difficult to achieve , but I am still trying .

GEET is an FE device on its own under the right circumstances . It does some pretty spectacular things .

see the progress @ ionizationx.com


Cherryman

Quote from: Cloxxki on September 26, 2009, 04:43:28 PM
.... Next step would be to verify battery life each way, of course.
.....

If turning it on and off will negativly influence the battery, that could easaly be solved by having two (or maybe even more!) systems at one battery. Switching between them would have the battery run continues and besides that it would also double the output (If the claim stands up)

zerotensor

Quote from: JimH on September 26, 2009, 02:07:13 PM
the inner tube has a insulated transition metal core - the outer tube has another type of transition metal clamped to it?

One of your electrodes is insulated?  Did I understand that right?  What is the insulation material?  I assume that there must be some submerged part of it which is not insulated, otherwise you wouldn't be pulling current...

QuoteI'm able to switch the power on and off at a 2/4 seconds interval without, (seemingly), loss of production... or so minimal I can't see it? Even the production looks far better than using plates - this is in rainwater (acidic, I know)...

Perhaps there is considerable capacitance between the rainwater medium and the insulated tube.  The insulation would be acting as the dielectric.  During the "off" cycles, the capacitor discharges its stored energy.  You might want to hook the cell up to an oscilloscope if you have one of those, and look for a decaying exponential during the "off" cycle.