Hydrogen Tap B29 (Flame)

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Uploaded by on May 19, 2011

AArons Cell

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Science & Technology

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Uploader Comments (johnaarons)

  • Don't over think this dude you simply had an arc that was igniting the bubbles that encountered the arc. Basic troubleshooting check your connections looking at what I can see of the cell the spade clip might be getting a bit close to the outer screen. I'm sure you had the cell secured in the center so it didn't fall over on top of your terminal. Also galvanized metal is zinc plated if the screens have been used a bit you might be breaking down the plating releasing it into your electrolyte.

  • The interesting part here (to me) is that if ( a big if) the flame was from "Hydrogen" than the system should have gone up in one "big bang"... but it didn't.. ( I am still here). ... instead ... a under water flame...

    John AArons

  • hmmm its hard to tell what ingited the hydrogen since I couldnt see through the sparks from your wires.

    That black water is h2o with an extra quark, hence the blackness.

  • The "blackness" is from the ash (not part of the reaction of the plates).. I believe we have to take that out of the question...

    John AArons

  • John, This is not rocket science. You simply can't use those materials in ANY HHO device without this happening. Those gaskets are eroding making black water. You know better than this.

    Larry

  • There is a misunderstanding here...(your).

    The problem here is a "flame".. and as of yet I can not find out where or why.. or how.

    Rocket is not the problem here... and if the "inference" here is that I am getting stupid.. I do not believe that is the case..(could be... but I think not).

    John AArons

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  • looks to me that the insulation broke down on the main contact to the plate there, the O from the water provided the environment for flame perhaps. the insulation layer on that wires looks degraded somehow. If theO level came up enough to allow combustion then maybe the heat, electrolyte and any metalic coverings have broken down and sublimated into the water hence gritty and balck (oxidised) either way, looks like you got an O spike in the cell.

  • You might have unwittingly started a controlled fusion reaction - some sort of cavitation reaction.

  • Check for conductivity in your insulator.

    i did a similar experiment and i discovered the rubber hose insulator, i was using actually conducted (with great resistance) electricity. (i think it is the fillers they use in rubber manufacturing, that are the problem.

  • cold fusion ? lol

  • Here is a theory, if there was no electric short, or something.

    The cell produces H2 gas in bubbles on the inner plate, the electricity between the mesh and the plate, separate H2, into H + H, or monoatomic hydrogen.

    The single Hydrogen bubbles recombine under water, forming back into H2 with the bubble collapsing to half its volume, creating great localized heat, but no actual flame or spark, at the surface.

    But i wonder what the black stuff is?

  • @johnaarons

    Remember this story from '95?

    They were using sound waves, but perhaps the Aaron cell is doing something similar?

    "The star in a jar effortlessly reaches temperatures of tens of thousands of degrees, which is hotter than the surface of the Sun."

    news. bbc. co. uk/2/hi/science/nature/4270297­. stm

  • The fire happened below the water line the bubbles were the fuel/oxygen they consumed themselves and went out rather than spreading no nitrogen present to expand to allow the bubbles to expand or spread to the other bubbles. Basically you had a bunch of small fires rather than having "a fire". Had it happened above the water line you would of had a big boom.

  • my thoughts are this. The water mixed with hho turned the water into a slow burning fuel. What I am thinking is this water injected through a mister into the intake along with hho would make the system burn at a slower rate. Similar to KANZAS machine where ultra sonics turned salt water into a burnable solution

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