LOL , yep, the BTU per Boiled egg ratio. JDC, cool , I would like to see the vid when you get the 009 needles going,
Check out the Korean vid on home heating, at about 4 mins they flash a hho stove that looks cool, Looks alot like stans patent for his burner, glad to see more people interested in HHO for its heating value
Nice man ..I have plans for a new burner just waiting on parts . I will be using 15 .009 SS dispensing needles going to use 5 lpm approx 700 watts , from all my calcs it should boil a small pot of water in less than a min......I did a watt test on my stove the other night on a small burner it uses 1386 watts on high took 6 mins to boil a small pot of water....In my video where it boils with hho in 3 min only took 725 watts ....I'll have more test and data soon .....Keep it up man
I think I may do a vid on making that tip, it cost three bucks and took ten minutes, its also an excellent tip for cutting and sodering.. 023 @ up to three liters a minute and 030 for up to five L/M. About three L/M got that water up to 140 degrees in no time flat, I'm boiling eggs for breakfast !
nicely done ... do you know how to measure BTU's ??? I know it has to do with getting x amount of water up by 1 degree or something like that ... you might need to crack a book ... also need to seal off your contaner and determine just what is coming off the unit ... is it steam or unburned HHO !?!
what we are looking for here is to see if there is anomolous energy we can measure ... we know that there are a bunch of free electrons coming out of that torch because we can measure that with a voltage gauge when when we torch a piece of steel ... now what we need to figure out is if we are boiling the water faster with the HHO torch, than we could with a heating element dipped in the water using the same power ... PITA to get it right, but we need to know ...
We are getting there, albeit slowly. I have more experiments slated for this, too. HHOBall is also doing voltage measurement experiments along this line, as well. I would have more to post, but my camera went kaput. Have performed several open ended element and closed ended element experiments with interesting results...until I can post new vids you can talk with D3 about what I did recently.
Looks good Dave
Gary
llewgnal 6 months ago
What exactly do you call fire "in" the water? COOL !
pinemontgo 2 years ago
LOL , yep, the BTU per Boiled egg ratio. JDC, cool , I would like to see the vid when you get the 009 needles going,
Check out the Korean vid on home heating, at about 4 mins they flash a hho stove that looks cool, Looks alot like stans patent for his burner, glad to see more people interested in HHO for its heating value
Davehho1 2 years ago
Nice man ..I have plans for a new burner just waiting on parts . I will be using 15 .009 SS dispensing needles going to use 5 lpm approx 700 watts , from all my calcs it should boil a small pot of water in less than a min......I did a watt test on my stove the other night on a small burner it uses 1386 watts on high took 6 mins to boil a small pot of water....In my video where it boils with hho in 3 min only took 725 watts ....I'll have more test and data soon .....Keep it up man
jdcmusicman 2 years ago
I love this effect. I should have cooked my pasta like that instead. LOL
hhoball 2 years ago
very nice
rainmaker0909 2 years ago
very cool
jdmforyou 2 years ago
Well done, what is your goal you want to archieve?
aluka1603 2 years ago
Aluka, simple question, simple answer
Cheap heat ! Much more better
Davehho1 2 years ago
is all of that steam,, set ip up under a gas trap to see if the gases completly condens very cool eather way ,i like it
NOBOX7 2 years ago
BTU
British thermo unit, bet a bunch of brits were sitting around wondering how much energy it took to heat up a cup of Tea ! lol
BTU, raising a pound (pint ) of water up one degree,
Have to admit, I find it interesting to reduce h20 to gas,then burn gas , to heat water up untill it vaporizes..and to ........
Davehho1 2 years ago
lol, ya and the BTU per scone ratio
NOBOX7 2 years ago
Thanks SSC,
I think I may do a vid on making that tip, it cost three bucks and took ten minutes, its also an excellent tip for cutting and sodering.. 023 @ up to three liters a minute and 030 for up to five L/M. About three L/M got that water up to 140 degrees in no time flat, I'm boiling eggs for breakfast !
Davehho1 2 years ago
nicely done ... do you know how to measure BTU's ??? I know it has to do with getting x amount of water up by 1 degree or something like that ... you might need to crack a book ... also need to seal off your contaner and determine just what is coming off the unit ... is it steam or unburned HHO !?!
SmartScarecrow 2 years ago
I tested the gas coming off my experiment, and it was steam...at least I think it was steam...there was no ignition.
1 BTU = Amount of heat to raise one pound of water one degree from 60 to 61 degrees at one atmosphere...
...UGH...
D3 figured it for me(since he's the math and data guru).
Well done, Davehho1 !!
Glad to see someone else on the same page..or at least in the same book...hehe
Steve
InstallGuys 2 years ago
what we are looking for here is to see if there is anomolous energy we can measure ... we know that there are a bunch of free electrons coming out of that torch because we can measure that with a voltage gauge when when we torch a piece of steel ... now what we need to figure out is if we are boiling the water faster with the HHO torch, than we could with a heating element dipped in the water using the same power ... PITA to get it right, but we need to know ...
SmartScarecrow 2 years ago
You bet...
We are getting there, albeit slowly. I have more experiments slated for this, too. HHOBall is also doing voltage measurement experiments along this line, as well. I would have more to post, but my camera went kaput. Have performed several open ended element and closed ended element experiments with interesting results...until I can post new vids you can talk with D3 about what I did recently.
Steve
InstallGuys 2 years ago