@inflivia Yea, I had noted RF Generator in his system. I have the capability to inject 1hz - 1Ghz into the heater cct (I will use ceramic resistors) through capacitors so as to iosolate away from the DC used for heating. I'm thinking this may be aligned a little to the theories of Frank Znidarsic
I'm not saying what he has postulated is true, however it has a "ring to it".
@inflivia - yep screwed up there sorry. Will check maths before I write again :-) BTW - gonna try to reproduce the test here in Australia. (Just to see the results - looks very interesting)
@ApteryxOz Not sure where you're getting your numbers from? ~33 kWh of electricity is needed to produce a gallon equivalent of hydrogen via electrolysis of water. That's about 260 grams equivalent of liquid hydrogen. For what, $5 in electricity at current prices? (excluding realities of packaging the hydrogen) That's enough to fuel 100 reactors for about 2.5 days. Yesterday's test of the large machine would output 28,200 kW/h as steam during that time.
wow.. cool.
lovelplants 1 month ago
è tutto molto interessante, e mi rende felice che stia avvenendo vicino casa mia...ma quest'uomo è inascoltabile!
pandabarth 1 month ago
ma come procede la cosa?
Quilbo 1 month ago
That is one "invincible" video. =p
efraimgarner 2 months ago
search fusioneafreddo on google
shubnigh 4 months ago
we have published a collection of news about e-cat!
shubnigh 4 months ago
@inflivia Yea, I had noted RF Generator in his system. I have the capability to inject 1hz - 1Ghz into the heater cct (I will use ceramic resistors) through capacitors so as to iosolate away from the DC used for heating. I'm thinking this may be aligned a little to the theories of Frank Znidarsic
I'm not saying what he has postulated is true, however it has a "ring to it".
ApteryxOz 4 months ago
@inflivia - yep screwed up there sorry. Will check maths before I write again :-) BTW - gonna try to reproduce the test here in Australia. (Just to see the results - looks very interesting)
Will post on here
ApteryxOz 4 months ago
@ApteryxOz Not sure where you're getting your numbers from? ~33 kWh of electricity is needed to produce a gallon equivalent of hydrogen via electrolysis of water. That's about 260 grams equivalent of liquid hydrogen. For what, $5 in electricity at current prices? (excluding realities of packaging the hydrogen) That's enough to fuel 100 reactors for about 2.5 days. Yesterday's test of the large machine would output 28,200 kW/h as steam during that time.
inflivia 4 months ago
@EDTHEWATERGUY Thank you <3
jocell202 5 months ago