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HHO Spark Plug Part 3

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Uploaded by on Nov 1, 2007

Fire it up

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Howto & Style

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  • likes, 2 dislikes

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Uploader Comments (camster6)

  • It is nothing unusual here. The intensity of light produced in a lightbulb is proportional with the effective current throug the lightbulb. Here you have 2 distinct current loops, one for each light bulb with different currents. Both loops are feed with energy from the same battery. Current is not the same with energy nor power.

    Same effect can be achieved by putting in series with each bulb a resistor, but different values, and feed them with a battery, without any pulses or electronics.

  • Exacly: See HHO Plug Final.

  • What electrodes did you use ?

    Tungsten or graphite or both ?

    Thanks.

  • 304 Stainless Steel

  • Hello Camster...

    I am the one who posted the video response. I am using a low power non grounded system, consisting of; A low power neon sign transformer (4000v @ 3W), a 5000V 00015Mfd capacitor, a tungsten spark gap(dumping into handmade xformer), Handmade transformer bumps the 4000V @ 3W...to 200-250Kv @ 3W

    According to calculations...that is 200-250Kv @ 15 microamps.

    I can see very well the bubbles, but my output is AC. I need a diode capable of handling 300Kv which won't leak 15Microamps

  • Great job RadiantEnrG!

    I am glad someone else is testing this.

    I did a lot of research on so called fusion and I am seeing some similar results this way.

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All Comments (20)

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  • have you tried to put salt into the water and tune the spark to emit a RF signal?

  • Hi Camster! I'm absolutely amazed and inspired by your circuit here. You're the only one who, as far as I know, has actually recreated the circuit with Stanley Meyers waveform- the ramping up and firing with the water. I tried over and over with his schematic, got absolutely nothing. Anyway, good job. It makes me even want to forget mentioning my complaints, no values labeled on the schematic or the big one which I can't believe nobody noticed yet- that would be that the NPN is backwards :-)

  • gd work

  • first !! when you make a voltage mutiplyer for hho you have to make 2, one for positive voltage and second for negative voltage then it makes sens!! now you just have positive puls and ground !!!! its hard to find how to do it but you can find it if you want!!! after you learn how to make +HV and -HV pluses then place your electrodes outside and apply both pulses on oposite sides of probe and see results ,more output when polarities are switched in places at kHz rate cheers from poland wojsciech

  • fascinating tinkering dude.

  • Also remeber. If you can get it to be contained in a little glass fuse tube, you won't ever have enough force to PUSH a piston down let alone move a car...

  • If you take a moment to get an ignition amplification unit such as an MSD DIS, and a Coil On PLug, and use a regular spark plug, you could have done all of the same things...

  • Right HHo = H²0 = Water LOL

  • Excellent work!

  • The reason why your input bulb is more dull is because of the extra voltage drop by the diode and rectifier, assuming your transformer coils are exactly the same. You could unhook the high side of both transformers and get the same results. If your output coil has a higher voltage, of coarse it will pull more current given the same resistance and be brighter. hook your bulb up to the output transformer in parallel to the n1 side WITHOUT the battery and see if there is any output at all.

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