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How to make a cement battery

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Uploaded by on Jan 27, 2011

its a video of how to make a cement battery because people kept asking me how i made mine

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  • @prototype9000 @prototype9000 Trawöger applies high voltage 50Hz 15kV AC but without current-flow to his reactor so far as I understand. It is more of a field effect that "connects" the loose quartz sand. anyhow I dont think that one should send much current through these batteries. Maybe your pulsed dc voltage was to high? Have you tried a joulethief oscillator with rectified voltage? with a AA I get about 22kHz, 25% duticycle, peaks at 17V max 8Vmin rectified with a common diode

  • @propableself944 i found a straight high voltage dc current seems to get better results than a high frequency one high frequency dc almost allways seems to cause a dead short or the cell bursting like a bomb if you baked it

  • @prototype9000 maybe there is a workaround by some way. The Frequencies may have to be stable in there I guess.

  • @propableself944 my new ones ihave been polarizing them with high voltage when im letting them cool off after baking them in the gril.l cant really afford copper tubes so i just use wha ti can find. i havent been able to make them stable yet im trying to get the right formulation im getting close

  • @prototype9000 -yes maybe tungsten is not a good choice

  • @prototype9000 - Very interesting! The Pyramid from Mr. Trawöger (user/Nanotec99 and comshopDOTtvSLASHtpp) uses copper tubing and he also states that the copper needs to be free of corrosion to get a decent output. Did you try to use copper tube and Aluminum in the middle? (so one could clear the outside and isolate it from the environment) mmh, it could be that the slow curing is needed to get a structured compound (polarisation?). Trawöger uses high voltage to structure his loose quartz-sand.

  • @propableself944 wouldnt use tungsten expensive and very resistant

  • @propableself944 it dosent seem to charge capacitors at all its finicky about the way it wants to be connected to things or it will appear the cell is totally dead when its not the case

  • @propableself944 its measured about 2.7 Ma continuously for a year now its not really a battery its more of a radio energy receiver since it can be shielded and led will not light at all then. the corrosion on the copper aluminum is what keeps it from obtaining more power but then again it may be the reason why its receiving power. since it migrates through the battery during the curing process. according to a paper i read about corrosion and oxides being a radiological receiver.

  • @prototype9000, user/ibpointless2 baked his batteries in the oven. maybe it turns out to be better in regards to corrosion when the water gets out there faster. He uses mainly copper pipe and a tungsten middle electrode as far as I have seen.

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