Heating Water With HHO Hydroxy Hydrogen Part 2 of 2 from HHOG Labs
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++ reputation....
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hello, is this a possible solution to replace electric home water heating, if so do you know what is the power consumption needed to produce enough HHO to get hot water for shower use..... thx
Alex
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I'm truly surprised no one has utilized existing technology to use HHO instead of NG. Take the old pulse furnace. Why not use HHO to ignite in the chamber instead.
Maybe I'm over thinking this. Just a thought ..... LOL
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@InstallGuys I'm not knocking the feat. I'm just wondering how effective it would be for the home owner. I've seen so many new whiz bang things that have no practicality or just mysteriously disappear never to be heard from.
I would dearly like to see someone kick the oil companies in the nads with something like this. I wonder if it could be used to generate electricity efficiently?
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just wanted to say that you are doing wonderful work, but i've been thinking about your results for a while... the question is are you heating the pre-existing water in the container, your odviously adding some water by burning the hho but what I cant seem to get a grip on is does the recombination of hho back to h20 cause any heat? if this is true then your actually just adding hot water to your container and I cant think of any practical way to test this theory, can anyone else?
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Awesome...!!! can't wait to see the mini hydrogen turbine...!!! :P
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Hi, Nice Job. I noticed the level of the water rose in the neck of your jug about 1" I guess that is from the water expanding from being heated. interesting, thanx
You don't say how much energy you're consuming (electricity) to crack the water. So if we're expending more energy than we are making then this experiment is a moot point.
I'm all for cutting our dependency on oil and the greed machine in the White House. However, is this fesable for the common man to use without the dangers? Good electrolizers require platinum plates which are very expensive.
Just a few concerns....
Keep up the good work
1timby 1 year ago
@1timby HEHE...someone just said it couldn't be done directly, so I did it. Attempting overunity wasn't the point of the experiment, in this case. Thanks for the comment, though!
On a side note, I once heated a 3800 CuFt space from 68 degrees to 74 degrees F in 3 hours with just 244 watts. I used a makeshift HHO heater and heat exchanger. The outside ambient temp was 68 degrees constant. I thought that was cool.
Steve
InstallGuys 1 year ago
Very well done! I have only exposed the torch to the surface of water when I was playing around - it certainly heated it, but did not boil it like a hot propane torch would. However- I love the way you set this up- the amazing thing is that the flame continued immersed in water! Nice job for sure....Have you taken it to a boil? and have you tried using the treated water in the electrolyzer?...
HybridWaterMan2 1 year ago
@HybridWaterMan2 Thank you! I have taken it to a boil. I haven't tried the treated water due to electrolyte contamination. I was more interested in heating untreated water.
Thanks,
Steve
InstallGuys 1 year ago
Confirmed Peer reviewed Reproduceable Results !
Whats next ? I heard some good things about cold fusion ! lol
Davehho1 2 years ago
Lets see...
I want to run a miniature jet engine on HHO... That may be asking too much...
HEHE
Steve
InstallGuys 2 years ago