@Iseekoutthetruth No, it uses water and electrolyte just like a wet cell. The difference is with a dry cell you don't have the whole plate submerged in water. Only the plate surfaces are exposed to the water. The edges are not. This makes the cell more efficient. You don't lose any voltage due to parasitic leakage. You should also insulate the inside diameter of the holes that are in the plate for the electrolyte to pass through.
@myhydrogencar Great info. Thank you. I plan to use this cell for testing. I'm hoping to power a sterling or steam engine eventually. I'm also working on a pulse motor using neodymium magnets and a special wound coil. It's because of people like you that we will someday be free of this oily chain that's weighing us all down. Keep up the great work! -Joel
@jab0805 I have an idea that I am working on. Run a generator on a loop from a 1hp 3/4 in. shaft compressor motor. I have a 4500w gen. I just have to look into pullys and belts to match.
@rikkiesix I just took it back apart and I'm trying a different gasket material now. The shelf material was too spongy. The stuff I'm trying now is a rubber fiber mixture. more rigid. Thanks for watching! -Joel
@myhydrogencar I do not know where all the conditioning is good for. Can you explane why conditioning and then the change to KOH. I'm in to this for a few months now and all I have read is that you can use NaOH or KOH. Please point me to the info where I can read all about this. My DIY dry cells do not show any more hho after a few days.
A cell like that should be producing more hho. Put some more voltage on it with lesser sodium hydroxide. Build a measuring device to measure the liters per minute (lpm).
you got a video of how you made it? just a piece of advise if you ever take apart a microwave, check out my newest video to see why
Iseekoutthetruth 1 year ago
why do they call this a dry cell? you don't use any water?
Iseekoutthetruth 1 year ago
@Iseekoutthetruth No, it uses water and electrolyte just like a wet cell. The difference is with a dry cell you don't have the whole plate submerged in water. Only the plate surfaces are exposed to the water. The edges are not. This makes the cell more efficient. You don't lose any voltage due to parasitic leakage. You should also insulate the inside diameter of the holes that are in the plate for the electrolyte to pass through.
jab0805 1 year ago
@myhydrogencar Great info. Thank you. I plan to use this cell for testing. I'm hoping to power a sterling or steam engine eventually. I'm also working on a pulse motor using neodymium magnets and a special wound coil. It's because of people like you that we will someday be free of this oily chain that's weighing us all down. Keep up the great work! -Joel
jab0805 1 year ago
@jab0805 I have an idea that I am working on. Run a generator on a loop from a 1hp 3/4 in. shaft compressor motor. I have a 4500w gen. I just have to look into pullys and belts to match.
Just throwing ideas out there.
leo420ize 11 months ago
@myhydrogencar Thanks for the info. I will do that with my next dry cell, an attempt to make a heating system for one room in my house.
knovos 1 year ago
Good stuff man. Keep it up.
Greetings from Belgium
Erik
rikkiesix 1 year ago
@rikkiesix I just took it back apart and I'm trying a different gasket material now. The shelf material was too spongy. The stuff I'm trying now is a rubber fiber mixture. more rigid. Thanks for watching! -Joel
jab0805 1 year ago
@myhydrogencar I do not know where all the conditioning is good for. Can you explane why conditioning and then the change to KOH. I'm in to this for a few months now and all I have read is that you can use NaOH or KOH. Please point me to the info where I can read all about this. My DIY dry cells do not show any more hho after a few days.
knovos 1 year ago
A cell like that should be producing more hho. Put some more voltage on it with lesser sodium hydroxide. Build a measuring device to measure the liters per minute (lpm).
knovos 1 year ago