@josephdupont I'll bet EVERYTHING has been tried up to this point...whether in a lab or someone's basement. I started using a mixing bowl to prove the concept before moving to different sealed vessels
@josephdupont I'll bet EVERYTHING has been tried up to this point...whether in a lab or someone's basement. I started using a mixing bowl to prove the concept before moving to different sealed vessels.
The key seems to be the addition of three neutral plates for every positive and negative electrode pair. The idea being that the volts needed for electrolysis, in this case, is 2+ volts...meaning the other volts go to heating the water. I originally tried this design with 2 neutrals and found a sweet spot. I never upgraded to 3 neutrals.
yes, there the kind you put on your main water line into your house to filter the water for everyting. we use them here in montana because 90% of the people have wells they filter out the sand and anyother sediements.
Clear house water filter canisters work i have had 1 under the hood of my buick for 2 year and no cracks or leakage. My cost about $22 no sales tax here. and there very thick.
I must say that at first I was VERY skeptical myself. I use to laugh at the original configurations that these guys put out, but I became a believer. My first "plastic" cells leaked like a sieves. Even my most advanced cells were no match for the heat (cracked, melted, etc...), and non of them sealed completely. The old fashioned Ball Canning Jars solved that problem...COMPLETELY! GO FIGURE!
Just FYI...I have been working with these glass devices for over two years and NEVER had an accidental explosion nor heard of any. I had to set one off on purpose to get it to explode...YES, there is a lot of glass spread over a large area when it goes.
I would have added a bubbler if I could get a good design that afforded me the ability to not only bubble, but keep the vacuum on the cell...I like controlling the HHO/Air ratio with the valve located on the cell, all the while keeping the pressure down in the cell with the vacuum.
...I remember that one guy did say he experienced an explosion with a glass jar...he had something short out inside the cell and BOOM!
To be quite honest, we drive around on gasoline bombs ALL the time and never seem to let it bother us...more folks get hurt and/or die GRUSSOM deaths via gasoline than HHO. HHO goes boom and it is gone...gasoline likes to hang around and burn you slowly.
Has anyone used salad bowls??? You could use pressure cooker gaskets or just some silicon caulking...
josephdupont 1 year ago
@josephdupont I'll bet EVERYTHING has been tried up to this point...whether in a lab or someone's basement. I started using a mixing bowl to prove the concept before moving to different sealed vessels
mrjamestferguson 1 year ago
@josephdupont I'll bet EVERYTHING has been tried up to this point...whether in a lab or someone's basement. I started using a mixing bowl to prove the concept before moving to different sealed vessels.
mrjamestferguson 1 year ago
Hey Joe,
The key seems to be the addition of three neutral plates for every positive and negative electrode pair. The idea being that the volts needed for electrolysis, in this case, is 2+ volts...meaning the other volts go to heating the water. I originally tried this design with 2 neutrals and found a sweet spot. I never upgraded to 3 neutrals.
mrjamestferguson 2 years ago
I want to stack stainless steel salad bowls with insulators. with pin hole vents.
you want lots of plates in series..
and low volts per plate.
josephdupont 2 years ago
yes, there the kind you put on your main water line into your house to filter the water for everyting. we use them here in montana because 90% of the people have wells they filter out the sand and anyother sediements.
english20002000 2 years ago
Clear house water filter canisters work i have had 1 under the hood of my buick for 2 year and no cracks or leakage. My cost about $22 no sales tax here. and there very thick.
english20002000 2 years ago
Are those the type that are usually used for filtering water?
mrjamestferguson 2 years ago
I must say glass and HHO scares me. I always imagine it blowing up and glass scrapnel.... I would switch to plastic if it was me...
marthale7 2 years ago 3
I must say that at first I was VERY skeptical myself. I use to laugh at the original configurations that these guys put out, but I became a believer. My first "plastic" cells leaked like a sieves. Even my most advanced cells were no match for the heat (cracked, melted, etc...), and non of them sealed completely. The old fashioned Ball Canning Jars solved that problem...COMPLETELY! GO FIGURE!
NOT MY DESIGN OR IDEA EITHER!
mrjamestferguson 2 years ago
Most of all, I could not SEE what was happening inside. This never bothered me until I COULD see inside, then it is hard doing anything else.
I am working on a dry cell that will get us away from the wet cells and the glass. It won't be long now!
mrjamestferguson 2 years ago
Just FYI...I have been working with these glass devices for over two years and NEVER had an accidental explosion nor heard of any. I had to set one off on purpose to get it to explode...YES, there is a lot of glass spread over a large area when it goes.
mrjamestferguson 2 years ago
I would have added a bubbler if I could get a good design that afforded me the ability to not only bubble, but keep the vacuum on the cell...I like controlling the HHO/Air ratio with the valve located on the cell, all the while keeping the pressure down in the cell with the vacuum.
mrjamestferguson 2 years ago
I WAS WRONG...I misspoke before:
...I remember that one guy did say he experienced an explosion with a glass jar...he had something short out inside the cell and BOOM!
To be quite honest, we drive around on gasoline bombs ALL the time and never seem to let it bother us...more folks get hurt and/or die GRUSSOM deaths via gasoline than HHO. HHO goes boom and it is gone...gasoline likes to hang around and burn you slowly.
mrjamestferguson 2 years ago