Added: 1 year ago
From: m3sca1
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  • how much is the watts of this shit?

  • cavitation is caused by mechanicly induced vaccum that pulls disolved gas out of the water, and forms a powerfull vaccum that subsquently implodes with enough force to eat metal , or pit metal on impellr blades or propellers, i dont think this is cavitation but rather steam.. my puter is fkt up hope you get this msg

  • @NOBOX7 thanx for your input bro-you been hiding under a rock somewhere? long time no hear....anyway the effect the multiple spark gap has on the water is quite amazing to watch.the water dosnt heat up much at all on this setup(it is slower than a HHO cell in temp rise) so i tend to think its not steam-the bubbles moving sideways rolling around themselves pushes me to the conclusion of cavitation like the pistol shrimp snapping his claw,made by sound waves from the violent reaction

  • @m3sca1 you may be write bro any way about the hiding under a rock,, i wish i was,, i need a rock to hide under, bin fukn round with these stupid ass females bro, i miss my life under a rock

  • yeah it looks like steam bubbles to me , you can observe these effects in a pan of boiling water, just as it starts to boil you will see steam rise to the sreface only to condense as it hits cooler regions of water

  • Well its not cold fusion, thats for sure. if it was, you would have blown the living daylights out of the glass jar with the release of energy.

    The bubbles you see are simply the splitting of the H2O. Passing electricity through water will just split the water into hydrogen gas and oxygen gas, thats all. The more current, the faster you will split the hydrogen and oxygen atoms. Also, the electrical charge of the flow of electrons can only act to push atoms apart instead of fusion.

  • I see what you mean about the bubbles forming and then disappearing.

    Wonder if the bubbles would form in a shallow container of water? If so, they wouldn't have as much room to collapse back into the water.

    Just a thought.

    L

  • @larryseyer yes its worth a try-like you,i tend to think that container shape can be used to effect this problem

  • @larryseyer i saw the pistol shrimp again on TV last night-maybe this thing is ultrasonic shockwaves making the same effect the shrimp makes...

  • if you are freeing HH, then a magnetic field on one side of the container should produce a noticeable change in the behavior of the "bubbles".

  • @DawnShereeJoe the strongest field i produce is a large NEO magnet-i will try that.

  • Well, the bubbles remind me of cavitation like pistol and mantis shrimp make to stun fish. It is very interesting stuff really fast boat props and pump impellers make bubbles under water as well and they are what makes propellers and impellers etc look as if parts have been melted away.

  • @jidun These bubbles you are getting may be some kind of EMP produced cavitation bubbles, scientists have studied the mantis and pistol shrimp and their conclusion thus far is quite interesting somehow they are producing a type of fusion....... the inside center of bubbles have temps rivaling that of the surface of the sun.

  • @jidun I know it sounds like b.s. but, check it out. The navy subs use the pistol shrimps cavitating bubbles as the main background noise that allows their sonar to work.

  • @jidun thanx for your comments-the pistol shrimp thing - i have seen videos on that subject-i think that something like that is going but its not getting hot like you would expect

  • @m3sca1 i think the bubbles are steam that rapidly condenses if no one has mentioned it yet, cavitation is caused by a vaccum that pull disolved gasses out of the water, great vid bro, and i loved the tampon vid,lmao

  • hi matt interesting thing is that you would expect shock wave bursts from explosion to burst the water surface .but it does not so do you think it is an implosion as joe booker states (alias joe cell)

  • @honda4004i think its like both are happening one after the other,expand -collapse.

    that is the only thing i can think would create those ultrasonic like shockwaves that are holding bubbles in a standing wave.

    if i do this with DC its just expand-if i use AC its seems to collapse again.

    also this setup is not getting hot like your traditional cold fusion setup. 

  • near the end you could follow one or two of the bubbles, threw the strobe effect to the surface.

  • @davidrrrd yes its strange how they seem trapped in like a standing wave or something and only a few get out

  • ...Looks like fun... Could use one of those in a Halloween spook house.. :O

  • @Mrwrinkleintime just make sure no one can touch any part of it-dont wanna zap anyone and have a real corpse,but yeah this thing starting up in a dark room would make you jump for sure.

  • looks great, did the water temp raise?

  • @crob227 yeah the temp stayed down-not like the classic cold fusion setup which gets hot real fast-this thing stays cold.

  • nice setup. i always love seeing this spark gap stuff, especially multiple gaps.

    bubbles are a mystery to me. (seeing yer metal detector there is a tease, looking forward to more of that) :)

  • @harpbloke thanx for commenting mate.

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