finally finished after a month of hard work, if anyone has any suggestions on how to better it comment and let me know thanks for watching
finally finished after a month of hard work, if anyone has any suggestions on how to better it comment and let me know thanks for watching
We just made a system with stainless marine cable. From what I’ve read, don’t use baking soda, potassium hydroxide is the cleanest; sodium hydroxide may be more efficient. We tried the thicker cable, but feel (early experiment) 1/8 stainless may draw lower amps. We have two systems. One with 14 holes a side and one with 8 holes a side for the two cables. Using an electrical box. We ran power to the two cables at the top, but will try your suggestion. Try fewer loops and thinner cable. Curious.
thicker clamps, 4-gague jumper cable wires, and a good smelling piece of deep-fried chicken…
I switched to plates too, working on a new design to further production
Hey dude, I did a coil ss wire in a cell and it melted…lol, I can tell you that you have to have netural wires or plates with correct spacing for the voltage drop to equal about 2 to 3 volts..hard to do with wire, thats why I went to plates, like the smack booster.. good luck..
Your so knowledgeable.
For your heat issue you need to know the voltage and amperage. Is your wiring rated for the amperage your pulling? another option and i agree with murraystrand make more cells to divide up the voltage. Another option is to circulate your water through a heat exchanger. Nice work.
pls i need to build car that run on hh0, and i need help from member of this forum. thanks.
Fola Qazim Oredeko
The amps will depend on your cell design and the water/electrolyte mixture. Just vary the voltage and monitor the amps. It’s easier to vary the voltage than the amps.
how many amps?
Some have suggested that running the gas output from one cell into the next and so on (daisy chained through each other) may allow the hydrogen particles to bond together making a more potent hydroxy gas. Start with a lower voltage of 1.5V and gradually increase it until you see the heat go up more than the hydroxy output goes up… At some point you lose efficiency on your cell (power lost to heat instead of hydrolysis). I bit of heat is OK (as hydroxy output increase with heat). Good luck!
Your cell is getting hot because there is too much voltage. You only need 1.5 volts per cell to create the hydroxy gas, but depending on cell design you may need up to 4 volts… any voltage over that creates heat. Ideally, you could make 3 – 7 of these cells (depending on design), hook them together in series on a 12v system, keeping the heat down, with a higher output of hydroxy gas.