thanks Eric
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Making the cell
When using a jar for the cell, do you put a vent much like a water pipe, for smoking, in with a tube to the bottom? Or do you just plumb it to the intake and it will create it's own flow/pressure?
Thanks, Jim |
Hello -
I have this one with no success to speak of, but I wasn't willing to implement the whole system : Hydrogen Booster Installed ... https://www.gassavers.org/showthread.php?t=2668 Here are some other sources to peruse, but the commercial ones seem to be out of date. If I don't see "latest news" that isn't within 2 months, then I begin to wonder what's going on : Fossil-Fuel Stopgap May Virtually Eliminate Auto Emissions - September 20th, 2005 https://www.damninteresting.com/?p=44 Hydrogen Injection Proven in Real-World Usage - November 16th, 2005 https://www.damninteresting.com/?p=195 Canadian Hydrogen Energy Company Ltd https://www.chechfi.ca/index.html I consider this little bit of history to be the "seed" of hydrogen boost systems : Hydrogen Injection PDF ... https://www.chechfi.ca/pdfs/hydrogen_injection.pdf Quote:
https://www.chechfi.ca/pdfs/productbrochure.pdf A Hydrogen-based Alternative - Canada https://www.ihsresearch.com/ CarloSW2 |
teammaico I'm not quite sure what you're asking, but all we did as far as venting was drill a whole in the top and seal it. This works for 2 reason. First of all because the jar is sealed, so the HHO produced in the reaction must escape, and does so through the hole in the top (routed to the air intake). In addition the pipe that goes to the air intake is drilled into the side of a pre-existing pipe which air flows past. I'm not sure if you're familiar with the idea, but if you have a T connector, and blow air past the top it creates a natural vacum through the bottom.
Basically what I'm saying is, just drill a whole in the top of the jar, seal a connector into it, and run a hose from there to your air intake and it should work just fine. The air intake does supply a small bit of suction that will also help you out. Good Luck! -Nate |
ok,
hydrogen DOES fuel the combustion process BUT aproximately like, 1000 watts equal 1 horsepower. It takes a lot more than 1000 watts for all the store bought systems out there to work. The gain in combustion chamber pressures never gets to the road, or your wallet because the engine needs to produce more electricity to power the generator. The only times i COULD see it possibly working is if you were running rich |
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https://www.eagle-research.com/ "For those of you who believe the misleading 'standard line' that a gasoline engine is 25% efficient, here is a little math that is easily verified. Given: That a standard sized car making 20 mpg traveling on a flat road at 60 mph with no wind requires about 12 horsepower. 12 horsepower is about 9 KW. 1 KW is 3,414 BTU/hr; thus the car is using 30,726 BTU/hr to maintain speed (9x3,414). The car is using 3 gallons of gasoline per hour (60/20). Gasoline has about 19,000 BTU/lb and a US gallon has about 5.8 lbs/gal so the car is 'consuming' 330,600 BTU/hr. (5.8x19,000)x3 This is about 9% efficiency, the 'actual vehicle efficiency'. (30,726/330,600)" |
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https://www.jcwhitney.com/autoparts/I...D:100000174760 Along with the Dollar store pizza cutter wheels? You might want to add a simple bubbler to avoid flashback? Could just be a jar with water in it. The gas bubbles up thru the water before going to the engine...also removes some contaminants. Interesting pages? https://oupower.com/index.php?dir=_My...s/Electrolysis |
Thanks that is what I was asking. It seemed to me the venturi affect would be pulling against a dead head. I thought the creatation of the gas would generate it's own pressure thus allowing the the venturi affect to pull it out of the jar. Thanks for your reply
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I have gathered the parts I need for a test HHO generator. Now I think I should examine when I want the unit powered. These are my thoughts...
HHO desirable Cruising, vacuum less than say, 18 inches. HHO undesirable engine off! Idle (zero miles to gallon anyway) brake on. Anyone have other suggestions? BTW, I wasted a lot of time searching for stainless strips only to find Ace Hardware has them for $.99-1.29 depending on thickness. |
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