My 2nd attempt at building a HHO generator. In my latest test, I was only able to produce about 1/2 litre of gas in 4 minutes. As far as I am aware, that is a very pants result, and it’s probably not worth going to the trouble of plumbing this into my engine.
hho
hho generator on 1991 Ford F-150
this is the hho generator jar on my 1991 ford f150 with a 5.0L V8. i made it out of a 1 quart glass mayonaisse jar with a plastic cap. it has two 6 inch stainless steel bolts bolted to the cap, wired up to a fuse box under the hood, and is wired to a 30 Amp switch under the dash that i use to turn it on/off. it makes plenty of hydrogen and oxygen which is plumbed into the manifold vacumm on the intake. its supposed to up the mpg a little bit, but only time will tell, i havent gotten that far yet. any questions or comments are welcome, thanks for watching.
HHO Hydrogen fuel cell – O2 sensor voltage adder
This is a very simple unit designed NOT to replace the O2 sensor signal but to simply add variable voltage to it, thereby causing the ECU to lean out your mix and allow the HHO to be more effective. I have been building an EFIE from plans on better-mileage.com(sp) but I started thinking about it and realized maybe we’re making this a little more complicated than it has to be. Elaborate circuits do work (I’ve been building circuits myself for many years) but there is a simpler way to accomplish the same thing AND easier for a typical person to make. Not everyone is comfortable with breaking out the soldering iron and soldering components onto a circuitboard or setting up components on a protoboard to build something elaborate. I wanted to build something that anyone could make, without having to go to that kind of trouble. What you see in this video is a unit that doesn’t take the place of the O2 sensor. Instead, it adds extra variable voltage to the already existing O2 (lambda) voltage. The voltage fluctations the ECU expects to see from the O2 sensor are still there, so you don’t get the danger of the ECU thinking something is wrong and putting itself into open-loop mode (which causes it to ignore the O2 sensor, negating any gains you were trying to make). This unit allows you to vary the amount of voltage you are adding, but you don’t need very much. Normal operating voltage from the O2 sensor runs around 0.45 volts (450 millivolts) but fluctuates about every second or so (the ECU watches for this as a diagnostic). We want to add just a little bit of extra voltage, about another 0.4 volts (400 millivolts) or so to make the ECU believe we are running rich, causing it to lean out the mix and pump less gasoline to the engine. I am using a penlight battery for my potential in this unit but once testing is completed, I’ll remove the battery and use stepped-down voltage from the vehicle’s 12-volt system to supply power for my potential (eliminating the need for a battery that will need to be replaced periodically) and provide power for a small LED digital voltage meter on the front of the box so that lambda-v voltage can be monitored. The 10k variometer allows you to adjust the trim of your potential’s voltage, within a 10k ohm window so that you have control over how much voltage you are adding to the lambda-v. You will never need the full width of this “window” because we don’t need to add much additional voltage. I may add resistors to the pot to strictly limit just how much you CAN add and may add a rectifier (diode) to the sensor wire but neither is planned unless I find they are absolutely necessary.
See updated photos of the cell and COSM/oscillator at:
http://www.freewebs.com/jhines2/apps/photos/
HHO Generator Vehicle Setup
This is the setup for a 1996 Ford Ranger. This video shows the electrical setup as well as the vacuum. If you have any questions or comments let me know.
Ill be making some more videos soon, please let me know what you think.
Make your own fuel cell
Here is a parts list and assembly for you to make your own fuel cell! Find it on eBay “Power Tube- fuel cell”
002 Magdrive – Components of the Magdrive HHO Generator
This is an overview of the components received with the Magdrive generator. Note: The PWM was purchased separately.
HHO Generator 1 Liter in 1min 30sec No PWM
HHO Generator Producing 1 Liters in 1.5 minutes. Running at 12.6V at 5amps. No PWM with 20:1 backing soda!!
HHO generator
Some more footage!