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Hydrosonic Pump

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Uploaded by on Nov 28, 2007

Instant Hot Water using the principle of cavitation... But it didnt work ;)
The rotor is 250mm with 30 rows of 3 holes 14mm diameter around the circumferance. There is a 2mm gap around rotor and the casing. Anyone any ideas? The motor gets hot, but the pump and water stay cool...

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Science & Technology

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Uploader Comments (waterboost)

  • your alignment is of from motor to pump basic alignment problem

  • @sidster64 - it is not out of line...

  • I don't know what to say other than " if it looks like a duck and sounds like a duck , maybe it's a duck. A lot of work for nothing. I think the first hint was they claimed that it put out more power than it consumed.

  • @Bubblytubebob - What, if you sound like a cock you probably are an absolutely massive Cock... Keep your opinions to yourself fool!

  • can you please tell me where you got your print from

  • @TheJteachout Print? do you mean design? have a look on rexresearch - we didnt have plans...

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All Comments (167)

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  • Hi. My quess is that the rpm is not high enough to get the effect you want, also the motor seems too small. For this setup, judging by the size of the cav.pump, I'd suggest a 5.5kW motor or bigger. Don't worry it will work, it will be cheap to use for your home.

  • @waterboost I'm afraid so long as you are not willing to accept the physical evidence that this is a scam, you will continue to be disappointed.

    The unit used in the demonstration appears to have a 3 phase motor of 30-50 HP.

    The truth is that you can try as hard as you like, but you will never get more energy out, than you put in, whether it is electricity or heat.

  • The problem is that your motor is far too small.

    To achieve anything like a usable amount of heat you will need a large motor, 30HP or so. Even if you do this, it will be more inefficient than had you run the same amount of power through a resistive heater.

  • Hi I know you have heard a lot of diffrent things you did not want to hear. That said I believe you have to test other designs of rotors some with thirty holes and perhaps more. the sise of unit you have there you would probably need to use smaller holes. like I said you would have to test diffrent designs of rotors.

  • Boiling water does not = hot water... i do not see how this makes it any different. If there was a way to use the boiling water as an energy source to create power then to heat water in this, then it might work. But there is a reason this isnt used anywhere.... Its another scam.

  • use a dc motor, as an induction motor will get hot if spinning to slowly and doesn't make as much torque

  • Don't give up!

  • phasing many electrical motors run on more than 1 phase there are several out there that run on 2 3 and 4 phase try replacing the motor

  • The motor should not get hot after a few seconds ~ maybe the wiring connection to the motor, perhaps the windings are crossed over. (sometimes in electric motors you might have to remove brass connecting tags joining some of the terminals whether in star or delta fomation). Test the motor without any load, measure the amps compared to the rating of the motor. Of course make sure it is the correct voltage, whether 3 phase 220v or 415 v.

  • Are you regulating the input pressure from the water? you could be flooding it, the output pressure needs to be controlled as well.

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