Effects pulling a vacuum on a cell.
Uploader Comments (CarbideTip)
All Comments (25)
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@subsonicnat favor esplicar en español gracias
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hola me interesaria saber mas referente a eta maquina parece que es con liberacion de oxigeno o sea una selda pero que hacen con el compresor y los vacuometros porfavor expliquenmelo en español gracias
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what happens is your production looks like it is increasing but all you are doing it making rain, fun stuff
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You can. I actually did this with a couple 20 oz pop bottles and some tubing in high school.
Just you have to factor in the fact that the further distance between closing the circuit the more electrical resistance. So while you do seperate it, you end up having a smaller yeild for the power put in.
Though with some better engineering one could have them closer while separating a lot more gas.
But storing oxygen is defiantly not something I'd recommend for anyone without the right apparatus
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not a bad idea! run it through a bubbler to keep the foam from getting sucked in. maybe a rheostat on the throttle to ramp up the voltage as well? How much HHO is too much though?
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I wonder if you could separate the H from the O by positioning the anode and cathode so the two gases could be drawn apart and vacummed separately. Just a thought...
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holy crap
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Thats amazing, thank you for that piece experience.
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your causing the trapped gasses in the water to be released.
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did you see any light or is only a video distortion? maybe a cavitation effect is present
Hi, Fascinating stuff, But!. How can you draw a vacuum when there is nothing to pull out, surely you can only pull limited amout of air, then collapse lines or SOFT Cell??. Just doesn`t make sense.lol. to me anyway, wished you had talked on the vodeo though, I may have understood better then. Please reply I am biting my nails .lol. Really enjoyed video though.. Signed... "Bit Thick" .lol.
subsonicnat 4 years ago
We are reducing the vapor pressure of the water. The pump pulls up to 30in, The cell can handle that. A engine will pull in the low 20's.
CarbideTip 4 years ago
fantastic experiment, congratulations
silviocavalcante 4 years ago
Thank you. :-)
CarbideTip 4 years ago
Between 25-30in. Its a refrigeration vacuum pump. No bubbler for this test. There's no source of ignition so the risk is low. But yes, I was nervous nelly the whole time. :-)
CarbideTip 4 years ago