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@y1QAlurOh3lo756z6 ай бұрын
Woah
@ddoherty59566 ай бұрын
👍🇬🇧
@reeshr.87446 ай бұрын
I would like to try
@Arrow141006 ай бұрын
BRING. BACK. THE. MOUSTACHE!
@mmz56376 ай бұрын
or even use a power supply as that would be safer.
@KY.Jelly076 ай бұрын
Tomatoes are 95% water. So maybe their intended use is for rocket fuel and not eating.
@sampam2636 ай бұрын
you are getting onto something :D
@karthikeyabrm6 ай бұрын
Maybe humans also since they are 65-70% water through not as effective as tomatoes
@kartikgupta91176 ай бұрын
lots of foods are 90%+ water
@barcodenosebleed54856 ай бұрын
My god. Imagine if Chernobyl was just a watermelon juice thunderstorm over Pripyat.
@pcka126 ай бұрын
The sea is rather more than 95% water, & I can assure you that it's 'purpose' (if it has one) is not to provide 'rocket fuel', rather it might be argued that it represents 'exhausted rocket fuel'!
@riccardodrera45646 ай бұрын
Guys remember, he has no suicidal thoughts
@Triangle12346 ай бұрын
He is happy and would never put himself in a life threatening condition nor would he disappear without a goodbye
@DuppeGutta6 ай бұрын
This is nothing new my guy
@TRASHLEVIATHAN6 ай бұрын
This is a well known reaction that's done in highschool chemistry lil bro, hes not in any danger
@riccardodrera45646 ай бұрын
Guys guys I know. You don't have to be the "AcTuAlLy 🤓🤓" kid. I was making a fucking joke. Just stfu
@refluxcatalyst71906 ай бұрын
He's also not claiming this is some new thing or somehow energy efficient. HHO has been known for decades. It's not a viable method. The 2nd law of thermodynamics always wins. It's a neat demonstration, but 1. It doesn't just run on water 2. it's an energy well that you can't get out of. 3. Using steam and steel wool to generate H2 is more efficient, and still awful in terms of efficiency. This is a neat demonstration and nothing else. This isn't some new thing that's supposed to change energy consumption. It's a desktop demonstration.
@classicmax7946 ай бұрын
"i'm prepared because i know i'm an idiot" is a very good line
@FailRaceFan6 ай бұрын
Be careful not to become smart in the process
@matthewbolton42896 ай бұрын
I felt that line in my soul
@Zidbits6 ай бұрын
Kinda like the Dunning-Krueger effect in reverse. The smarter you are, the more you know about what you *don't know* about the universe around us. It's a bit of a paradox; the smarter you are, the dumber you think you are because you know what you don't know.
@dodgygoose30546 ай бұрын
That should be his Tshirt
@dwayne201105216 ай бұрын
@@Zidbits How does this fit in? If we are not learning from our mistakes why keep making them?
@ryantaylor70782 ай бұрын
Dude.....not just science skill............but pure entertainment skill also......Instant like and subscribe. Keep going - you rock.
@ryantaylor70782 ай бұрын
Finished the vid. Kinda disappointed. Here's my comment for future vid: You* improve the design and actually build a rocket. Or just show why it's not really feasible. Ambitious? Sure. But it's what your title said........
@insAneTunA6 ай бұрын
I made a hydrogen generator years ago. I know a lot about the subject. The best metal to use is platinum. Other than that the only affordable metal that does not dissolve during electrolysis is 316L stainless steel. Not 308 or regular 316 or anything else. It has to be 316L stainless steel. Hydrogen is an acid and it dissolves pretty much any other affordable metal. Also, if you apply more than 2,3 volt to the anode and the cathode you will create heat, and more heat means more resistance and less hydrogen production. To overcome the heat issue, and when you are using between 12 and 14 volts, for example from an old fashion battery charger that doesn't have the fancy electronics, you need to have 1 anode plate, 5 neutral plates that are not connected to anything and insulated from each other, and one cathode, all the plates need to be insulated from each other. This way you can create enough surface area and you can keep the temperature under control as well. If you want to produce large(r) amounts of hydrogen search for dry cell hydrogen generator. A dry cell configuration is more efficient because there is no current leakage, because there is no water at the outside from the hydrogen generator. With producing hydrogen it is all about amperage and how much surface area that the plates have. More surface area means that you can run a higher amperage without heating up the water. When you add sodium hydroxide you need to add it slowly while running the generator so that you can control the amount of current that it draws. Not more current as your power supply can handle. You can also use baking soda. You get even higher efficiencies when you use a high power PWM to run the current. Always make sure that you have a back flash arrestor in your line. You can make one from a 316: stainless steel pipe that is packed with bronze wool, or with stainless steel wool. BUT DO NOT USE REGULAR STEEL WOOL BECAUSE IT WILL CATCH ON FIRE and cause an explosion. The back flash arrestor is there to prevent that your generator violently blows up when your gas comes into contact with a spark or a heat source. Also make a bubbler to which your gas has to run through. This is to make the gas dry. Make sure that that bubbler has a weak spot from plastic film, so that the weak spot will blow out if there is an explosion.
@MahdeenSky6 ай бұрын
Consider titanium as an alternative metal for electrolysis although more expensive than steel but less than plat. Use a voltage regulator or PWM to maintain optimal voltage, to get around the min voltage for water hydrolysis. Use a conductivity meter when adding sodium hydroxide to get the perfect amount of conductivity. Consider potassium hydroxide as a better alternative to baking soda, since its highly conductive.
@insAneTunA6 ай бұрын
@@MahdeenSky There is no valid reason to use titanium. It is very expensive, hard to machine, and the electronic properties for this application are not better as 316L stainless steel, which is already hard enough to machine. More exotic materials only make the whole build process far much more complicated and expensive. One can measure conductivity. But there is no benchmark to which you can compare, because the amount of amperage that you want to draw heavily depends on the surface area from the plates, and also on how much amperage the power supply can deliver. So it is much more accurate and practical to measure the amperage while adding the electrolyte. About 15 years ago KZbinr Zero Labs designed a PWM with current limiter. It limits the current if the resistance reaches a certain value. Via his channel you can find his web page for instructions how to build it. Potassium hydroxide is indeed also a possibility.
@DavidRas6 ай бұрын
For the generator, can you use the same sort of configuration that they use for the super high powered magnets, with the films layered in a spiral configuration? They use it for cooling the magnet...just a thought.
@ZeusEBoy6 ай бұрын
@@insAneTunAI know someone already said titanium but they have a point it’s much cheaper than platinum, alternatively palladium and ceramics could be used. Potentially even a rubber so long as the thermal resilience is sufficient to not break down
@flowinsounds6 ай бұрын
i wonder if you can 3d print in 316l stainless
@rustyactivia57626 ай бұрын
Don't use a bigger battery. The solution for the high current you're drawing is neutral plates. It looks like you're drawing around 3V with this setup but no shared amperage. If you were to have 5 fully isolated plates(neutral plates) in between then you could use 12V to get 2V at each plate and amperage shares across all the plates. The ideal voltage per plate is 2V so if you have 9 plates you take 10 gaps 2V = 20V input and your ideal spacing is around 2-3mm. You also won't want your drink being too conductive or hot either or that will also cause higher current. I've built 3 generators and have used these tips to make them better each time. Hope this info makes it to you, i'd like to see this project visited again sometime!
@tomclanys6 ай бұрын
That's what I said too in my comment! Agreed
@alanberger116 ай бұрын
Question: Is this like wiring in series vs parallel?
@doughnut11076 ай бұрын
100% this. To destroy those batteries implies a ton of wasted energy in heating the water
@auspiciouslywild6 ай бұрын
Great suggestion. I was going to say he shouldn’t go to higher voltage because you’re just wasting energy then. But I suppose a high amp 2V supply is difficult. Losses in cables at low voltage and high current is an issue. Makes a lot of sense to keep the voltage high but divide it at the unit
@tomclanys6 ай бұрын
@@alanberger11 more or less yes
@Cretan10006 ай бұрын
A few points from someone who has made an oxyhydrogen torch before. 1. Your first setup with the gyroid shape had several issues. When performing a high current electrolysis reaction, selection of the electrode material is very important. I used 316L stainless steel as it was one of the most corrosion resistant. Even then, small amounts of the metal will still be destroyed in the reaction, so plating a thin layer on simply is not going to work, at least for very long. 2. It would probably be useful to experiment with different amounts of spacing between the rings. With too little spacing the bubbles of gas that are being quickly produced will displace the water from the electrodes reducing your efficiency. As you said, too much spacing will increase the resistance and make the device larger overall. 3. The voltage isn't something that bigger is simply better. Higher voltages increase the current yes, but also significantly increases the rate of electrode corrosion. Electrochemical splitting of water requires about 1.8v per cell. Round up to 2v for whatever inefficiencies you might have. Don't increase your voltage much higher than that. You could use a voltage and current regulator to dial these in which will also prevent you from burning out your battery. 4. As I'm sure you know oxyhydrogen burns at nearly 3000K. I'd be very interested in what materials you'd use and how you'd manage to actually use this as a rocket propellent
@DarkAttack146 ай бұрын
Probably the same way that nasa handled it, feed the fuel around the nozzle, also increase efficiency preheating the fuel
@raloed.3636 ай бұрын
The minimum theoretical voltage is 1.23V per cell. But as you say in real life it will be more due to losses. And maximum theoretical efficiency is 1.23 watts produce 11.4 ml of HHO has per minute. Edit: the above 11.4 ml volume is at room temperature and pressure
@MiniEmpireBros6 ай бұрын
Gotta love ChatGPT
@PsychoticWolfie6 ай бұрын
Would definitely be cool to see if anything can even be designed to handle the heat of a perfect stoichiometric ratio. Most rocket engines run either fuel or oxidizer rich, typically due to heating concerns. Maybe an aerospike could do it? But that's just a nozzle, would basically have to invent the aerospike version of a combustion chamber. Inverted combustion chamber or something, idk
@timarc98956 ай бұрын
@@DarkAttack14 true but they used cryogenic LOX, he's using a room temperature gaseous mix of hydrogen and oxygen. I doubt this would have much cooling effect.
@TXODMАй бұрын
In high school I won a small scholarship for my graduation project. I designed a hho generator and ran a nitro rx engine completely off the output of my generator and did a hybrid on a lawn mower. This was in 2011. Here are the improvements I'm going to offer as far as the design and power source goes. 1: design In my design I used 4" 8g stanles plates. They were spaced with nylon washers and I used nylon bolts and nuts to connect the plate aray. On one side of the array every other plate had a tab with a whole. This is how I connected all of the positives and negatives together with stainless bolts and nuts. The generator would fill a balloon in 5 minutes that I would then pop with a lighter. Talk about loud! The main take away is to increase the overall size of the generator. 2nd: power source. For the power source find a good automotive battery charger with a high cold cranking amp (CCA). This could get you over 1000 amps at 12v. This is far more that your using now and can power a much larger generator which means faster and higher output! Do this and you should get enough volume to power your jet. Would definitely power a nitro rc engine. As far as your electrolyte problem I don't have a good solution. I just used sodium bicarbonate in the form of baking soda. I've always wanted to try and use hydrogen peroxide as the solution And even fantasized about heavy water. Hope my experience can help and if you Wana pick my brain more let me know!
@Kashikoi_Magicarp6 ай бұрын
I love that you include the failures to really show the engineering process. From problem, brainstorm, solution, design, prototype, trial, error, and back to problem. That, coupled with knowledge of mechanical and chemical engineering, makes for increadibly talented work. Idk if this is just a hobby for you, or if you do this kind of work for a living, but so many businesses would be lucky to have your kind of talent.
@4saken40412 күн бұрын
What's great is that this time he was actually able to use what he learned from one his fails (the gyroid) and incorporate that in a different way down the road. People forget that the path to success is not a straight line. The "failures" along the way are actually very important steps in the process. Somehow succeeding without them is pretty much just sheer luck.
@awesomegoodman7756 ай бұрын
To avoid confusion, there's a difference between electrolysis and hydrolysis. Electrolysis uses electricity to split molecules, while hydrolysis uses water to break down molecules
@tankers4all6 ай бұрын
Yea tag integza in that i was also thinking the same thing
@sergemarlon6 ай бұрын
Oh yeah. I recently learned that's the term for cooking with water, aka boiling. Hydrolysis. It did confuse me when he used it. Glad you guys cleared that up.
@thead96 ай бұрын
I was coming to say the same thing.
@IsaacBayel6 ай бұрын
Yes me too, I guess it was a mistake there
@jasoncthomas5 ай бұрын
1. Be aware of some of the Poisonous gases that can be created using different electrolytes and metals, like Chlorine, etc. 2. Use a PWM Controller. 3. As many others have said: neutral plates. 4. Use a pump and an external small radiator and fan to circulate and cool the electrolyte. This also may help to move the bubbles more quickly away from the plates, allowing more contact with the fluid. Perhaps position the plates vertically and pump the water up from below, to aid in the natural upward direction of the bubbles. 5. I met Alan Schoen once. He passed away just last year at the age of 98. He was a very fascinating person.
@MMm-he1ei5 ай бұрын
Tomatoes are vegetables, i am not vegan😂
@lcx0cd5 ай бұрын
非常专业的意见,让爆炸减少
@rumblethis20235 ай бұрын
@MMm-he1ei Sounds like you may also be a vegetable!😂
@cliffcampbell88275 ай бұрын
@@MMm-he1ei The tomato is a fruit. Strawberries are vegetables (the "is it a fruit or vegetable?" classification has something to do with where the seeds are located - on the inside or the outside).
@N7than5 ай бұрын
@@cliffcampbell8827 Strawberries are aggregate fruits because they come from a single flower with more than one ovary. The fleshy part of the strawberry, called the receptacle, comes from the stem just below the flower that ripens. The brownish or whitish specks on the outside of the strawberry, often called seeds, are actually individual fruits called achenes, each containing a tiny seed. The average strawberry has around 200 achenes, making it essentially a multiple fruit.
@skyanimates691018 күн бұрын
@Integza you should try a Stanly Meyer generator to get your gas. He used water as the insulator between two capacitor plates. He would then charge the capacitor with a 50% duty cycle and a resistor to prevent spikes and arcs across the plates. When he charged the capacitor to overcharge he would get a catastrophic failure in the insulation medium and a ton of HHO gas. He could repeat this about 30 times a second. From the math I have seen it might be the most efficient form of electrolysis we currently have. A 555 timing chip can be used for the duty cycle.
@NukesXX6 ай бұрын
Hi, ECE major here with some advice on the battery problem. Trying to constantly pull the max amperage out of a battery is a very easy way to kill it as they aren't really designed to discharge tons of energy at once, but rather a bit of energy over time. So running a battery at max current is going to overheat it and kill it very quickly as you have experienced. Capacitors on the other hand are much more suited for this and can much more reliably discharge a large amount of current in a short time frame than a battery, but the issue is they may not hold as much energy as a full battery can. They are on the other hand cheaper to get in bulk than a battery so it wont be as catastrophic and costly if you blow a capacitor than a battery. ALSO on the issue of batteries overheating and dying, use some sort of current limiter on the battery or else you will likely keep running into the same problem. Hope this helps!
@zoutewand6 ай бұрын
My bad I meant parallel
@threeuniquefingers6 ай бұрын
I was just thinking, can we use capacitors themselves as some kind of “current limiter”? They can be connected to the battery, the battery will give us capacity and capacitors will give us optimum current(assuming we pick the right one). Best of both worlds!
@Introverted4206 ай бұрын
What abt super capacitors they hold energy for longer time 🤔
@benjaminsteakley6 ай бұрын
What about a transformer with fuses and a thermistor prior to the transformer? If it is current hes looking for a transformer should do well
@nodrance6 ай бұрын
I was just about to suggest this. Batteries for sustained current, capacitors for lightning
@MasterDyogenes5 ай бұрын
Try combining your H2 generator with an ultrasonic transducer - it is said that this would multiply the performance because the bubbles adhering to the metal prevent further water from coming into contact with the metal plates, allowing more H2O to be split. The ultrasound is supposed to ensure that the effectively usable surface is continually cleared of bubbles.
@swim808s5 ай бұрын
Good idea
@piccolinomasci16075 ай бұрын
a surfactant greatly reduces the surface tension of water allowing hydrogen bubbles to escape the surface of the eletrode. this is a simple chemical and does not require complex electronics
@diegorodea54255 ай бұрын
Good idea, also adding some water flow could move the bubbles
@Litl_Skitl5 ай бұрын
What would the effect of using AC be for this? Could it jiggle the plates or the water enough to create a similar effect? Maybe a single phase motor could be the perfect generator for this then.
@pcmacd5 ай бұрын
@@diegorodea5425 or a propeller at low rpm
@aaronjones45296 ай бұрын
1) There's a certain voltage between the anode and cathode where electrolysis is most efficient; FROM MEMORY (so please check this) it takes about 1.25V to work at all, 1.5V is optimally efficient, and above 1.75 V doesn't produce more gas, just producing heat instead... As a result, instead of connecting each plate to +ve and -ve, just connect the end plates to +ve and -ve, and you will end up with a voltage gradient between the the plates inbetween... ie. 48V with 30 plates gives 29 gaps with 1.65V across each gap. 2) Any design which uses an electrolyte will leave a deposit on one or both of the electrodes. However it's also worth noting that these deposits are encouraged by impurities in the electrodes and the water... Sodium is quite high in the electrochemical series (and as such is less likely to form deposits), so sodium chloride (table salt) is a simple and abundant electrolyte... However this does have the caveat that Chlorine gas will be formed at the opposite electrode, as well as your desired Oxygen... To minimise this, you only need a very very weak solution of sodium chloride, so that much more Oxygen is produced to small trace amounts of Chlorine gas. 2b) Further to this, Potassium hydroxide (KOH) is probably the easiest to work wit because (in theory) it is not consumed at all in the electrolysis reactions at the electrodes. In reality you can lose a little KOH through it's reaction with the gasses you are collecting, so very trace amounts K2O2 and some KO2 will be produced. But it is nearly negligible. 3) Going back to impurities causing scum and material deposition at the electrodes - Start with deionised water, add a small amount of electrolyte. Run the electrolyser for a few days, strip and clean each of the plates, wearing gloves and being careful to not get contaminants on the steel plates (even just oil off your fingers is a problem), rebuild, and re-fill with fresh clean deionised water with a little table salt added. To clean them, sand them down with emery cloth and rinse with deionised water. 4) Stainless steel plates are quite cost effective electrodes, but graphite or platinum are better because they are more inert than the stainless steel.
@mikemarshall70166 ай бұрын
Wow, good comment!
@szogun19876 ай бұрын
As I found an expert here: Does orientation of the plates matters? Wouldn't hydrogen be replaced with salty water faster when plates would be oriented vertically?
@Samischilling6 ай бұрын
don't we use a salt bridge so that impurities don't deposite near the electrodes and to remove liquid junction point according to this I think the the impurities won't deposit near the electrodes
@goamarty6 ай бұрын
Titanium is also spposed to be a god electrode material. very resistant to crrosion
@lokimidknight73196 ай бұрын
Theoretically, graphine plates could be an ideal electrode material, but not very cost effective. A little platinum plating on stainless plates might be something to try tho.
@Mind4orLease6 ай бұрын
That process is actually called Electrolysis. Hydrolysis is using water to break OTHER chemical bonds. Electrolysis: breaking chemical bonds using electricity, Hydrolysis: breaking chemical bonds using water. See the patern?
@revimfadli46666 ай бұрын
Analysis 💀
@Runefrag6 ай бұрын
Yeah it's pretty clear he has no idea what he's talking about and no idea what he's doing.
@Guds7776 ай бұрын
@@Runefrag And he is doing this at home... :D :D :D
@LordDragox4126 ай бұрын
@@Runefrag You do realize he's not a native English speaker, right? It was a mistake.
@psykology92996 ай бұрын
@LordDragox412 you do realize he's being sarcastic right 😂
@PlasmaChannel6 ай бұрын
Shocking that a PLAZMA battery couldn't do the job. Man, there goes my hopes for a plasma battery! This is a sick build Joel.
@Ke11an9476 ай бұрын
Can we get STLs for the gyroid spacers? You know, in case I want to not try this at home.
@JanasV6 ай бұрын
Integza, use the bigger battery and an adjustable voltage module, since voltage directly affects the current draw. You can limit current with a bulky resistor for initial tests, and please buy and use a clamp meter for measuring current. The closer the gaps between electrodes - the less conductivity you need for the same results, since resistance in water is proportional to the distance between electrodes. Reducing water conductivity could also help with the current. You could reduce the surface area of the electrodes if your current setup produces more fuel than you need (save space for more water). Also test out more water solution options, test for residue, reusability, price to performance, etc. Would love to see this design actually function. I'm sure you can make the hydrogen generator more efficient and functional than it is now.
@dazenguile42152 ай бұрын
“shocking” 😏
@LikeABestGamer6 ай бұрын
Hi. Can you make small car model (maby just 4 wheels) powered by hydrogen from water. -> Tomatoes are disgusting ! (ps love u Integza)
@SmartMoney4206 ай бұрын
I would like to see it
@CenReaper.6 ай бұрын
Me too 😊@@SmartMoney420
@shanesalyers54336 ай бұрын
Two men in suits would like to know your current location, please 🥰✨️
@funny_gaming_Pro6 ай бұрын
Cool idea, could see how it can work, but sadly hydrogen explodes pretty violently and i'd doubt there is any engine that could withstand pure hydrogen combustion, however you could mix it eith another fuel and, for example give only 30-40% hydrogen (or less, depends on the fuel and the engine) with another fuel to the engine and it could boost the efficiency of the engine.
@ashutronomy34486 ай бұрын
Do you want him to disappear?
@james-le6fn5 күн бұрын
My dad made something similar a couple years ago. He used stainless steel plates for the anode and cathode, separated with plastic washers. Then he used a car battery and booster cables to run the generator. He has always wanted to put an amp meter on it to so how much power it draws, but he never got that far. Sorry for the late comment! Hope you see this!
@LabCoatz_Science6 ай бұрын
The problem you're having is because of the acidic electrolyte. Silver may not react with sulfuric acid, but when it is used as a positive electrode, it will break down because it is directly attracting the sulfate ions. Hence why only half of the electrodes were discolored, and also why little oxygen was produced (evident by the less violent hydrogen detonations). This is why sodium or potassium hydroxide are most often used: the hydroxide ions don't attack the electrodes!
@TheKikori6 ай бұрын
I think it could be more the case that the electroplating isn't perfect enough, leaving small cracks and an uneven surface through which copper is exposed and corroded through electrolysis. Thats why he could scrape down the copper metal which revealed fresh silver. In the alkaline electrolysis you can see 1.) the formation of Silver(I)-oxide at the anode and 2.) the formation of elemental copper on the cathode
@Nworthholf6 ай бұрын
@@TheKikori silver is still reactive enough, even with perfect surface. That why they use platinum
@TheKikori6 ай бұрын
@@Nworthholf was more referenced to the red stuff. I know that silver oxidizes at low pH electrolysis of Water to Ag+ / at high pH to Ag2O
@kstricl6 ай бұрын
But could you reverse the reaction and essentially create a cleaning action by using an AC current instead of DC? Since the product of the electrolysis is not being separated, rapidly reversing the polarity shouldn't be an issue for the end product.
@LabCoatz_Science6 ай бұрын
@@kstricl In theory, but in reality, it takes time for the ions to migrate, so AC electrolysis doesn't usually occur. Using AC would mostly just corrode the electrodes. The best fix here is to simply go back to a hydroxide or carbonate, which work well even with cheap steel electrodes.
@smartfusion87994 ай бұрын
I suggest keeping the water in motion using a magnetic stirrer. This will increase the surface area and help quickly remove any gas that forms on the metal surface.
@DawnFireX3 ай бұрын
Maybe just tilting the cylinder sideways would make it easier for the bubbles to escape?
@smartfusion87993 ай бұрын
@@DawnFireX true lol, or redesign it in a way it transports the bubbles away in a natural way
@GodzillaGoesGaga3 ай бұрын
Why not have a reservoir of liquid to replace the gas with a gravity feed ?
@Voidix5143 ай бұрын
the only issue with this is if the water is moving it will drastically increase the amount of reaction time that is needed for the process to work there for causing a bigger problem of less fuel being produced stagnant water is best for this take this as a good example if you move water in a pot before letting it boil first it will take longer to boil because you are not giving it enough time on the heated surface the same can be said for the elecrtodes if you are moving the water fasterthan the electrodes can react with the water to split the water into H2 O then you ruin your project the best way to do this is to have a multi anti vertical conical shape that directs the flow of the gasses upwards there for making them follow buoyance to the engines reaction core IE the burner
@peoplez1292 ай бұрын
@@DawnFireX It would be better to just have a reaction lined tubing system that is tuned specifically to inject just the right amount of water through it, and bonus, you get a pretty large surface area too. You don't really have to deal with trying to make the bubbles flow better, because they will react and immediately exit. At its most efficient you wouldn't even need a large surface area, you'd just design it to use as much power as is needed to instantly convert along a tiny stretch near the end of the tubing, and tune its power to how much volume you want to push through the tube at a given time. That's kind of the problem with this design...while it produces a reaction, that reaction also loses kinetic energy by having to move through the solution. If you convert it instantly as it exits a tube, you get even more kinetic energy out of it, which would matter in a rocket, as the faster the starting speed of the gas being used, the faster it can react and the faster it can exit the rocket, adding a boost of force on top of pressure. It's when you get things bouncing off of things internally that you get problems, and for rockets that's a bad thing. And you can achieve quite high fuel velocity with such means, just like how ion engines work by electrically accelerating a gas. If you've got a gas you can first accelerate and then combust, you get more thrust, and that initial conversion can be utilized as a form of initial acceleration. With normal rocket engines we're mostly just accelerating the liquid fuel with turbo pumps, which does move large volumes of fuel quickly, but we can definitely move a gas even quicker before we even combust it, which means it moves even quicker after we combust it.
@judgedayan99345 ай бұрын
As for efficiency: It takes a lot more electric energy to split the HH from the O than the energy produced by burning them together.
@chrissorensen95115 ай бұрын
@@judgedayan9934 That process requires the electrodes to be too far apart for efficiency and the bubbles off each electrode must be collected separately. Not impossible, but it is a waste of energy and you still need to introduce 02 to the hydrogen to get it to burn. Nature got it right. Ignite them together or with at least a little more outside air. An ICE will not run on pure HHO, it needs to mixed with outside air to combust properly. There is no reason to capture pure HH when you have to dilute it to combust, anyway. Peace out.
@DavidJames-v1y5 ай бұрын
Huh? Where is the energy going then? Is the water getting hot, or giving off RF energy or something?
@chrissorensen95115 ай бұрын
@@DavidJames-v1y Hot, you guessed it.
@Drachenhebron5 ай бұрын
@@DavidJames-v1y heat, yes.
@rokmcbalaban85745 ай бұрын
Solar power can provide a lot of electricity though.
@DoshHet2 ай бұрын
17:53 Use car battery.
@sublimemuse39516 ай бұрын
There was a researcher by the name of John Kanzius that made an accidental discovery using radio waves at 13.56 MHz to essentially shake the water and separate the hydrogen from the water ending up with the ability to make the water burn. By the way, I’ve been subscribed to your channel for a long time and you’ve always been interesting, amusing and provoking. Thank you for doing this.
@TvTink6 ай бұрын
Wow that's a really nice discovery
@nickhadziannis84516 ай бұрын
wasnt that a film with kianu reeves
@_Reverse_Flash6 ай бұрын
Great, he would need to put more energy in than he would get out which defeats the purpose. It's not even a battery. At best it's a propellant medium.
@Pajafilm6 ай бұрын
Did you see the "It runs on water" documentary?
@claytoncarner43616 ай бұрын
@@_Reverse_Flash To be fair, that's ALL batteries, including the radio waves thing, its just a matter of efficiency... which still makes the radio waves thing awful. That's actually the problem with hydrogen as a fuel iirc, it takes so much energy to make and store hydrogen than to just put the energy in a lithium battery and use that. On the flipside, water itself is incredibly cheap which is why it still has quite the promising future, so long as we can find some more improvements on electrolysis.
@tvishmaychoudhary696 ай бұрын
Use a lead acid battery man!!! There's a reason they are used in starter motor for big vehicles They can supply Huge amount of currents Also one thing you could have also done is to grind the plates in a criss cross pattern using sand paper which gives more surface area.. And for the safety please add a bubbler too Thanks!! Have a great day
@HexCopper6 ай бұрын
I imagine he went with lithium because lead acid is too heavy to go along with the whole setup. Grinding the plates will give more surface area but will also cause it to draw more current as those are directly proportional. He already has a flame arrester which would do the same job as a bubbler and probably keeps the gas dryer.
@largeskbtumqu93376 ай бұрын
Either a lead acid battery, or an old PC power supply, some of them can supply 50-60A on the 12V rail
@sudenluola22416 ай бұрын
I was expecting him to just pull up a car battery at some point lol.
@BartekJuszczak6 ай бұрын
@@largeskbtumqu9337PC power supplies are OP for DIY use. You can get 20A 5V and 80A 12V for £100
@arthurmoore94886 ай бұрын
He does have a flashback arrestor in there. You can see him holding it at one point. That's probably better than a bubbler, and is cheaper and easier. Also, it appears he's going with the much safer approach of injecting propellant in bursts, then closing the valve and igniting it. Which produces a pulse jet effect, but significantly reduces the chance of flashback.
@forgeteverythingyouknow54136 ай бұрын
let's calculate the overall efficiency: The short version is you only get back 1/3 of the power you put into getting the hydrogen out. 0.75 (electrolysis) × 0.90 (storage/transport) × 0.50 (fuel cell) = 0.3375 or 33.75% This means that only about one-third of the initial energy input is recovered as useful energy output. The inefficiency ratio can be expressed as: Inefficiency ratio = Energy lost / Energy recovered = (1 - 0.3375) / 0.3375 ≈ 1.96 This means that for every unit of energy recovered, about 1.96 units are lost in the process.
@toddm18086 ай бұрын
Yeah usually the average person don’t know thermodynamics and repeat everything they hear.
@labanbaxter6 ай бұрын
While I agree with how "inefficient" the set up is... Here's what I see... 1. Storing the fuel and oxygen is perfectly safe (water) 2. Perfect amount of hydrogen and oxygen for perfect combustion 3. If the sources of energy is unlimited or easily renewed, such as nuclear or solar panels efficiency of energy to fuel conversion doesn't matter all that much Also, the water storage is just about as good as it gets as far as density goes
@biggusdoggus6 ай бұрын
@@labanbaxter the density is not so important for stationary use, but if you want to use it for transport (as the video implies) you also have to include the energy density of the electricity source, which would generally mean a battery of some kind.
@N8Dulcimer6 ай бұрын
@@labanbaxter good news water moves itself, and has moved itself for hundreds of millions of years.
@harms1236 ай бұрын
@labanbaxter Efficiency is important no matter what. There is no reason to waste energy on converting electricity into hydrogen and oxygen if there is no good reason to do so.
@pineappler64732 күн бұрын
I love the way you explain yourself and everything you do in this video. It’s one of the few of those random engineering experiment videos on KZbin where I understand nearly everything going on at every moment, and actually find myself being able to predict and know what you’re doing next. - hs sophomore
@titaniumaf40976 ай бұрын
I’m a chem engineering student and I’m very interested in design. The switch from anti-gyroid to stacked cylinder was absolute beauty. I’m glad I found your channel
@rogerphelps99396 ай бұрын
Stacked cylinder is the obvious solution, not some fancy geometry. for practical applications you need to be able to separate the hydrogen and oxygen. That means that the anode and cathode must be some distance apart.
@CindySorenson-r4m5 ай бұрын
You just have to know that somewhere right now in a small cell in America there's a prisoner with a battery, a cup of water, some floor cleaning supplies they smuggled back, and 2 wires trying hard as they can to make one of these things work to light his damn cigarette!
@timothyrayner36265 ай бұрын
Indeed. From watchng this video on youtube in their cell ;) (Actually - if they had the resources to get that stuff together, they could probably manage to smuggle a mobile phone into prison quite easily).
@timothydobbs15835 ай бұрын
HEY NOW!!!!! I've been there and have done that. It's easier to use pencil leads, power cord off of your clear plastic boom box and a fluffed up Q-Tip. We had to use Bible paper as rolling paper. We made sure that we never smoked Peter. Seriously, we don't smoke Peter!
@yunnailavayen55745 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
@Zerk885 ай бұрын
If you run wires to the resistors, you can eliminate the graphite from pencils and make long lasting lighters that won't explode over time, or when the lieutenant decides to play with your lighter and show it to too many coworkers. @@timothydobbs1583
@petrjanu46955 ай бұрын
Barabuuuuum 😁😁😁
@brianlink3915 ай бұрын
Given your engineering background, I'm surprised you haven't applied Ohm's Law to optimize your electrolysis setup. For an efficient hydrogen generator, you can calculate the ideal electrolyte concentration using a simple approach: Determine your desired current (I) based on your hydrogen production goals. Know your power supply's voltage (V). Calculate the target resistance (R) using Ohm's Law: R = V / I Then, gradually add electrolyte (typically potassium hydroxide (KOH) or sodium hydroxide (NaOH) for alkaline electrolysis) to your water while measuring the resistance between electrodes. Stop when you reach the target resistance. For example, if you're using a 12V battery and want 5A current: R = 12V / 5A = 2.4 ohms Adjust your electrolyte concentration to achieve this resistance. Remember, higher voltage requires less electrolyte to maintain the same current. This method helps you maximize hydrogen production efficiency without overloading your system. It's crucial to fine-tune based on your specific setup and safety considerations.
@logan7lion6445 ай бұрын
definitely
@RandySeverino5 ай бұрын
Check out the giant HHO generator I built 16 years ago. kzbin.info/www/bejne/hnfVnHt8os-rZsU you don't need to get so fancy with that complex geometry, though that was very cool. stainless steel plates alternating, car batteries and a PWM. I stopped these experiments when I almost blew up my garage. And you are correct, it is very loud because Oxyhydrogen is a mixture of hydrogen (H2) and oxygen (O2) gases. very volatile. DANGEROUS !!
@SeegerG5 ай бұрын
Super helpful to know. I don't know how I hadn't caught that part of the discussion yet. I don't know if I have the authority but I say 20 points are due.
@DashzRight5 ай бұрын
Guy’s a poser
@subzero51015 ай бұрын
You could also just limit the power draw with resistors . I have a feeling he knows that but was instigating more discussion to farm ideas. One of those sneaky thinking guys .
@moidelalande942 күн бұрын
I have done some testing whit HHO and I have some conclusion of my study that can help you I hope, 1-- nearer is better but it is limited by the bubbles and the bubble size so in your next build increase the pressure the max you can witch make the bubble very small and be sure the bubble can escape without acumulating between the plate because where there is bubbles there is no water to produce HHO and the big pressure only slitgly increase the power requirement, 2 -- If you want the right stochiometric you must use only pure water anything that increase the current will create something else than HHO in a certain percentage depending of the voltage 3 -- your latice must be made in or cover whith a big layer of a metal that dont oxydised because even them dissolve but at a slower rate to make it last. Hope you read it and it could help!
@thuff86Ай бұрын
Be careful, government sees this and you'll fall and hit your head on concrete 22 times in an accident
@Backup-wm9cn6 ай бұрын
we did something similar in my chemistry class, we had directions to mix yeast with hydrogen peroxide to make oxygen, and to mix hydrochloric acid with zinc metal for hydrogen. We weren't told how to collect the fuel, my group decided to mix it in sealed containers with only one exit, and to plug the exit with a syringe, then let it sit, and after a while, collect the gas with the syringe. We did this for both hydrogen and oxygen. Then we had to cut pipettes into short little stubs with the resivoir at the top, fill them with water, then gently insert the syringes into the water, and inject some oxygen and some hydrogen (separately) which displaced the water. Then we had to put 2 wires thru the little water seal and use a spark to ignite it and shoot the little rocket.
@edwinmopas87346 ай бұрын
Would small accumulation tank help buffer the better?
@Gabe-e3u2 ай бұрын
Don’t let the assassins get to you if big space companies see
@kapofyboetty2284Ай бұрын
Please ,I beg ,repent and save others, your friends and family, before it's too late, God is coming back soon ❤
@poatao-pe1olАй бұрын
Energy cannot be destroyer or created he is not in trouble. If he rewroted to exhaust back into the electrolysis and got energy he would have an infinite energy machine witch be make energy out of nothing
@leifcarlsen9406Ай бұрын
@@poatao-pe1ol It wouldn’t run on nothing. It would run on hydrogen using the least energy efficient method for obtaining it. Also impossible with current technology to even retain %100 of energy without loss to successfully keep the machine running, even with adding more FUEL (water)
@Dhruv-wv9ckАй бұрын
He is just breaking water apart and then combining it back together, even with a method that is 100% efficient(not possible), he cannot gain any energy
@thunderpokemon2456Ай бұрын
This tech was known decades ago 😂
@therealquade6 ай бұрын
I know a few ways to improve this design. step 1, rotate the lattice 90 degrees so the the plates are vertical instead of horizontal. the gas bubbles want to go up, and the plates are in the way. step 2 include a recirculation pump to forcibly pump water through your lattice, further pushing bubbles out and water back into contact with the electrode. step 3, just use salt water. you'll get salt deposits on your electrodes, and lower conductivity, but that will be way easier to clean off. it also makes it safer for a circulation pump. also lower conductivity means you can measure it and limit your current so you don't overload your power source. at that point it's about as optimal as it will be, so you can just scale it up. electrical resistance in the lattice itself means there's a maximum lattice size, so you're better off having multiple parallel lattices if your goal is maximum output. as for rockets... don't you lose efficiency because the water rapidly cools and loses pressure going from gas to liquid?
@mumujibirb6 ай бұрын
unless you mean other salts salt water releases chlorine gas which is uh not too great
@therealquade6 ай бұрын
@@mumujibirb electrolysis of sodium chloride into chlorine gas requires a higher current than water IIRC. I could be wrong, im just remembering highschool. Technically *any* electrolyte will work. Also, you can use distilled water instead, though this has the consequence of also producing ozone, and h2 gas dissolved in the water, like carbonation. Effervescent water via hydrogen gas. At least until it becomes saturated... which means there is waste. Thats also requires a bit more current. Yes, i just googled a bunch to double check this stuff, but thats all i did.
@KavinTeenakul6 ай бұрын
@@therealquade Hi, producing chlorine does require higher voltage than oxygen from water but not by much, water need 1.23V while chloride need 1.36V (see wikipedia page Standard_electrode_potential_(data_page)). So you would produce a combination of chlorine gas and oxygen gas, so definitely don't use salt. Also reducing conductivity to limit the current is not ideal since you lose efficiency that way, you better reduce volltage or use smaller cell. Any electrode would work if you don't mind it dissolve into the solution in a few minutes. Also distilled water is not ideal as it has low conductivity, use NaOH solution instead.
@xato37966 ай бұрын
This is a good way to “die of mysterious circumstance” or at least have some very nice dressed men knock on your door
@tangereine55036 ай бұрын
if the water is pumped, wouldn't it clean itself with enough pressure?
@ejbragg1Ай бұрын
Hi, Integza. I think this is a good experiment, and I have an idea for improvement… First, the problem with electrolysis has always been high current consumption. But you can still get the same results by changing your method - think low current, high voltage. This will be much more efficient, as well as remove the problem of residue on the electrodes. If you use pure water, something more like distilled water, you can get the molecules in the water to change direction by switching polarity. Instead of using high current to break up molecules of water, you use friction - the friction of jiggling the molecules at a high rate. You need a high rate of switching. Stan Meyers proved this concept when he built a car that ran on water, back in 1986. Another central idea is that you put the electrodes in the center of a cylinder of a measured diameter. You calculate the resonant frequency of electricity in water and find try to match that. One pulse of high voltage will resolate several iterations in the microseconds-ish, before it dies out. You time that so you send pulses after x iterations. The water will boil at room temperature because of the massive breakdown of water into gas.
@notj57125 ай бұрын
I like how he slowly discovers the construction of a battery. Soon he will discover the spiral.
@willlock36445 ай бұрын
I was looking for your innovative videos… Couldn’t find any. So maybe just STFU
@Olikiscrazy5 ай бұрын
Then he will need to swing out by said spiral.
@primedialga5 ай бұрын
@@Olikiscrazy Maybe once the spiral is discovered, he could also look into capacitors, which also use spirals and could lessen the load on batteries (charge the capacitor with a batterie, or with an appropriate charger, then use the capacitor to generate hydrogen)
@raphanunu69125 ай бұрын
@@primedialga And use this hydrogen to run an engine to load batteries.... God ! We just invent perpetual movement ! Free energy for everyone ! I'm so happy, no more war, fuck climate change and earth is flat by the way !
@shrihari77156 ай бұрын
-Use a transformer instead of battery or current limited powersupply -Remove the outer shell of the electrolytic capacitor and place it in the water to get more surface area
@hjagu13236 ай бұрын
But current limiting is probably a good idea no matter the power source
@bat__bat6 ай бұрын
Why is he using DC anyway?
@shrihari77156 ай бұрын
@@bat__bat I mean transformer with bridge rectifier.
@shrihari77156 ай бұрын
I agree @@hjagu1323
@shrihari77156 ай бұрын
I agree @@hjagu1323
@MadLabCircus6 ай бұрын
i like how most viewers try to contribute to the design and fix its flaws. This shows the content of the channel is not only Captivating but also attracts intellects from various demograph to contribute to the fountain of knowledge
@darkzeroprojects42455 ай бұрын
Even a moron like me is somewhat interested. Like to see this stuff be actually implemented and experimented to see if can actually make solid results. Especially more so than institution's full of subverted establishment jokers we have now in tech and such.
@jimmymelonseed40689 күн бұрын
The anti gyroid electrode is ingenious! You have an incredible mind!
@sfkrgo5 ай бұрын
I don't think I've ever come across a more interesting chemistry/engineering video yet. This was awesome
@donmackshanks8325 ай бұрын
Try generating under a vacuum
@rswow5 ай бұрын
Clickbait. Power source is more than water...it's a battery that keeps dying. You need a battery, not just water! And, the so-called "rocket" went nowhere.
@K31TH3R5 ай бұрын
While interesting, it's unfortunately also a dead end from both a chemistry and engineering perspective. The problem is the idea at it's basis, water as a fuel. Water itself is already a combustion product, and water cannot become a fuel until more energy is put back in than can ever be recovered during it's combustion.
@cain3085 ай бұрын
The other commenters are right about water not being a true fuel source. I recognized that the moment I saw the title and--full disclosure--mostly clicked on it to hate-watch it and see the false assumptions he was probably making lol But at the same time, looking past the misleading title, I think this is still very interesting as a cool home experiment. It's fun to watch someone tinker with a problem, encounter problems, problem solve their way through, etc. I enjoyed watching it. The end result is just a (probably inefficient) way of turning electricity into movement, using the water as a way of turning electricity into chemical energy then into thrust via combustion in his rocket. So sure, it probably isn't _practical_. But that doesn't mean it isn't interesting and very cool, I think
@AhdDib5 ай бұрын
@@K31TH3R I wonder what the mass efficiency of this method is. It may have applications in space if it's extremely mass efficient.
@antburst54946 ай бұрын
It was nice knowing you man
@ThornyPickled6 ай бұрын
☠️
@o_ricardo6 ай бұрын
FBI Open up
@andersjjensen6 ай бұрын
I assume you're new to the channel? Doing sketchy shit is his hall mark. His favorite past time is to strap sketchy rocket shit to sketchy rolling shit and strap a sketchy Integza on top for extra lulz.
@MLAM5186 ай бұрын
@@andersjjensen The joke here is that while researching alternative fuel sources to oil can make your workshop blow up if you fail, it can also make your car or your house blow up if you succeed
@morasenpai6 ай бұрын
@@MLAM518 You seem to have misunderstood the joke here as well
@py5cho6 ай бұрын
And this is why I enjoy the videos. Funny, entertaining, straight to the point content. Theres enough effort put into understanding the process, actually proving it work or it doesn’t, and the reasoning without overwhelming the viewer if they’re not well informed prior.
@Pale_Kingg6 ай бұрын
"This is me 4 years ago": with mustache "This is me 1 year ago": no mustache
@imrasgor6 ай бұрын
I saw only this diffrence
@MoroccanReverb6 ай бұрын
i was expecting a ManScaped ad lol
@Pale_Kingg6 ай бұрын
@@imrasgor same...
@oh_finks6 ай бұрын
Kind of a glow down ngl
@DudeRandom6 ай бұрын
@@oh_finksI really like the beard and mustache combination he had years ago. Such a classic look.
@monsterdream146 ай бұрын
1:56 not to mention that liquid hydrogen is so tiny that it can escape pretty much anything. Even NASA have some trouble keeping it in tanks.
@MattH-wg7ou6 ай бұрын
Designing the seals and bearings for the turbopumps for the RS-25/SSME engines for the Shuttle was apparently a nightmare!
@PaulG.x6 ай бұрын
The liquid hydrogen molecule is the same size as the gaseous hydrogen molecule
@BondJFK6 ай бұрын
We need a wall around fuel tank - project 2025
@jupterzot6 ай бұрын
@ElonHusky what? What are you talking about?
@ermakers1297Күн бұрын
@@PaulG.xtbf in addition to dealing with the small size, with liquid hydrogen you are also dealing with a super cooled liquid that turns almost everything it touches into super fragile structures waiting to break.
@sujalchauhan83466 ай бұрын
Integza, I recommended this idea to you probably a year or two and you made a rocket out of it. You even selected me for a giveaway of 3-D printer, but due to some issues, i have to let it go. have a small full fledge rocket which is capable of storing the gas and literally flies high up in the air. This was my project in year 2022. Thank you for developing this and the video was soo good and amazing.
@dorian137024 күн бұрын
If you manage to vibrate the hole generator in a high frequency, it will produce even more gas. The gas bubbles release themselves faster from the sheets, and it also helps to separate the water molecules. Another tip, buy a power supply where you can limit the current, the hotter the water gets, the more current the generator uses.
@-FusionZuser-5 ай бұрын
the government: "i just wanna talk to him-"
@composermega5 ай бұрын
LOL
@IloveJellow4 ай бұрын
its okay though making hydrogen is kind of explosive so that is why we do not actually use it in cars today.. its more unstable than using liquid petrol. Lets say you hit one of 1 million pot holes ?? You have a 51% of moving the hydrogen tank just enough to make it explode.
@pauliewalnuts25274 ай бұрын
@IloveJellow if you only produce what you need at that exact second it should be fine. water is more stable than gasoline its self
@IloveJellow4 ай бұрын
@@pauliewalnuts2527 you should try the experiment and shake around the water tank producing the hydrogen.. It will explode from frictions. So what I mean by this is you need a tank for holding extra water and another tank that will be producing the hydrogen. The tank that is holding the reaction is not fully stable unless at a full rest without movement any form of cymatics or friction can set it off and this can cause a good pop too happen and followed by a brief fire of 4,000 degrees Celsius heat. This is no longer at a experiment scale because you'll need a much larger reaction chamber for a car and even larger ones for bigger vehicles. So ya the implications of it ,is what is stopping us from using it in a commercial setting it's like driving a IDM that could go off at any time.
@pauliewalnuts25274 ай бұрын
@IloveJellow have vent holes, baffles, dampening sponges so it cant occupy the same volume.
@scottmoore5985 ай бұрын
The problem with the high current is that you have such a high voltage over a low resistance. Try stacking 9 plates to create 8 gaps. Attach +12v to one end plate and Ground to the other end plate. The voltage in the KOH will evenly create 1.5v gaps or cells. Also, turn the plates sideways so the gaps are vertical. This way the water will help push the lighter bubbles out of the way faster. Electricity will not flow through the gas, so getting them off of the plate faster helps create gas faster. I’ve read years ago about running the hydroxygen into the air intake of a car to help increase MPG. The idea is that when the spark plug fires, the hydrogen flame front is faster that the gasoline vapor flame front and will help ignite all of the gasoline faster earlier in the power stroke and become more efficient.
@TruWrecks5 ай бұрын
This is the solution. The current conductor is an electrical short circuit. You need multiple plates to solve this issue.
@MajorSkyblue5 ай бұрын
This guy Electrolysis'. Would be cool to see if hydrogen cars become more prominent than electric in the future.
@hercules711855 ай бұрын
But the issue is the energy loss during the electrolysis stage.
@Yodeification5 ай бұрын
I did this to a 2000 ford f150 and it works. I got about 25% MPG but the really cool thing was the added horse power that it adds. However you really should do it. After you burn the gas it turns back to water and it rusted the inside of the engine. You would need to build an engine special. I stacked the plates with 4 neutral plate between the load and ground with a total of 21 plates. Works great but to control the amps, it comes down to how conductive you make the water. I used baking soda so add more or less to start then to fill up, just add water. Distilled water only.
@amnestyhophop15355 ай бұрын
@@hercules71185it’s as easy as chucking some more water in the tank
@alphagt626 ай бұрын
An old model railroad trick, put some 12 lightbulbs in line with the device. If the device resistance gets too low, the bulb will burn brighter and provide resistance to the circuit, but if the current flows the bulb will barely light at all. The idea with trains is that as long as the train is running, the bulb doesn’t light, but if the train wrecks and causes a dead short, the bulb will prevent blowing a fuse or burning up your power supply. Not sure this will help? But it’s an idea. If that doesn’t work, try a big high wattage resistor, the big white square ones, it’ll get hot as heck but limits the current flow.
@pianosprite2666Ай бұрын
instead of layered discs you can be more space efficient when scaling up by wrapping 8 layers(positive, spacing for water, neutral, spacing for water, negative, spacing, neutral, spacing) in a spiral pattern like most capacitors are configured. make it as flat as possible so the bubbles can escape fast from the gap to be replaced by new water.
@WynterLegend6 ай бұрын
"I'm prepared because I'm an idiot." That statement has more wisdom than all the worlds' governments and universities combined. People who think they know everything never prepare for mistakes or unforeseen variables. They charge ahead and get angry when it doesn't work. You, Dear Integza, have just demonstrated something that is rarer than Diamonds and White Holes: Humility and Integrity.
@NemoConsequentae6 ай бұрын
He may be an idiot, but he's a _wise_ idiot! He takes the Half Life G-Mans advice seriously, _"Prepare for unforeseen consequences."_
@Carlo99yehey6 ай бұрын
bro is extraordinarily humble
@karlminehart62466 ай бұрын
Very interesting. Information from someone who has worked in the jewelry industry: electroplating is somewhat porous so when gold plating there is a copper layer then an electroplated layer of nickel followed by a layer of gold otherwise the copper will tarnish or corrode through the gold. My two cents. I would like to see a test to measure the energy output vs the energy needed for the electrolysis.
@Ozlozcircuitresearch6 ай бұрын
You forgot unicorns hens teeth and rocking horse poo lol😂😂😂
@mechticulous82026 ай бұрын
You mean Integzaty.😅
@100luk6 ай бұрын
"Let's launch rockets!" "Here's some water." "What?"
@myhopefullyhumbleopinion5 ай бұрын
Someone should call Elon
@averiWonBTW5 ай бұрын
@@myhopefullyhumbleopinion they already considered using hydrolox for starship and determined that it wasn’t worth it
@Noubers5 ай бұрын
Worked on a water electrolysis hydrogen oxygen thruster for small and micro satellites at an old job. The team flew it, it worked, but it never got much press and the company didn't really push it after. Look up "Hydros Thruster". Advantage is if you ride as a sub payload on a launch it's a lot easier to make people feel safe about your payload when your fuel is water instead of hydrazine or something else scary.
@maple__m00n16 ай бұрын
styropyro laughing with his 100 parallel battries
@KT-pv3kl6 ай бұрын
pyro is an anomaly ... quite literally. the man has more testosterone coursing trough his veins than 10 healthy men or around 50 soyboys. it kind of explains why he has absolutely no fear when tinkering with things that even highly experienced professionals gulp at.
@johnathanmcdoe6 ай бұрын
@@KT-pv3kl Sure, pyro hams the cavalier attitude up for the videos, but I have never seen him behave in a way that I haven't experienced from other people with arguably dangerous occupations. Meanwhile, Mr. Integza here has really been pretty reckless a couple times with high pressure contraptions and flywheels. (I do wonder about pyro's insane test problem though and how much it contributed to him being... the way he is)
@KT-pv3kl6 ай бұрын
@@johnathanmcdoe it was tounge and cheek not to be taken seriously but hands down the things this man does in his garage/room/backyard many professionals wouldn't even attempt in a dedicated lab especially not without serious safety equipment and a pair of gloves and plastic "safety " glasses arent what I would describe as serious when playing with lasers strong enough that even a reflection can burn out your retinas or enough ampere to spot weld your nose to an I-Beam. as for his condition I wonder why he is so laid back and friendly actually. most people with his condition end up committing serious crimes or violence due to having a short fuse , low impulse control and insane aggression.
@johnathanmcdoe6 ай бұрын
@@KT-pv3kl Yeah, I'm not arguing he's being cautious in the common sense... sense, just that he does have basic safety in mind. The laser glasses are a good example, he has talked about those at length a couple times and they're the expensive and certified kind. As for the testosterone thing, if I had to speculate, I'd guess he found enough valves to relieve the pressure through near constant activity. Got medical news so bad you're too distracted for the usual thing? Let's go storm chasing! Built different.
@KalaniMakutu6 ай бұрын
Ol’ Sparky plus this thing… one small leak and it won’t be a detonation... It’ll be a deflagration!
@KK-dontАй бұрын
Genius and practical hydrogen yield for beginners thanks
@justinbanks23806 ай бұрын
I can't be the only one watching that wonders why when he showed metal printing at the start, he goes through so many iterations of trying to plate and then clean the gyroid print, he doesn't just get a printed part from metal (maybe the complexity increases the cost? Or perhaps too long of wait?) Then he just completely changes it up from a very intellectually cool and interesting gyroid topology, to a series of stacked discs! 😂 Love it
@ledocteur77016 ай бұрын
Metal 3D printing services don't offer many types of metal, and the one he showed only has stainless steel, which isn't a very good conductor. Silver would be hilariously expensive, tho copper might be okay if he finds a service that has it.
@justinbanks23806 ай бұрын
@@ledocteur7701 oh, that makes sense. Thanks for the reply
@burgerbait6 ай бұрын
I'd guess he wanted to test the design before committing paying and waiting for a 3d printed one. Smart seeing as he eventually changed the design. Remember, he might be an idiot but he is a professional idiot 😂
@Makula966 ай бұрын
Another reason could be the allaround conductivity. If it was conductive through all the shape, It would be useless as you need two poles. You would have to saw off the baseplane a get two meshy things stuck together and then find a solution to keep them fixed but not touching. This way you have them perfectly spaced as its one object, and you just make part of it conductive. He might be an idion, but pretty smart one.
@TheLtVoss6 ай бұрын
@@ledocteur7701 yeah stainless has quite the higher resistance but it is conductive so the Grafite paint could be skipped also but the paint is probably cheaper for his stuff
@phillpauley66723 ай бұрын
From what I've learned from playing around with hho, to lower the draw on the battery, add 1 to 3 neutral plates between each positive and negative electrode plate. Somehow, that lowers the draw on the battery and still produces well. I saw this on a few old hho videos from nearly a decade ago and tried it. It works.
@krahe93766 ай бұрын
I appreciate how you demonstrated that a more complex or engineered design isn't necessarily the most effective. Sometimes, simplicity works better.
@CarsCatAliens6 ай бұрын
There is an old video from late 80s early 90s of Bob Lazar showing how he converted his Corvette to run completely off of hydrogen.. From generating the hydrogen, to modifying tanks, the plumbing, and very little adjustment for Fuel O2 ratios
@PaulDeuchar13 күн бұрын
When you solve power supply increase. Use density, turn plates vertical so gas detaches faster. Then Ultrasonics to dislodge the gas faster and increase active surface area over time. Great work
@IFRYRCE6 ай бұрын
Reminder that this process is net-negative energy wise. You need more power to break the water into hydrogen and oxygen than you wind up getting from burning the hydrogen and oxygen. It is a neat process and it has applications, but it is not some kind of a panacea to solve our energy problems.
@perkunast96806 ай бұрын
That's only partially true, you need power to create the hydrogen. But the hydrogen can be utilized more efficiently. A jet engine can be more powerful and more efficient then a electric one.
@JohnnyWednesday6 ай бұрын
It's worth pointing out to the casual reader that it's an identical amount of energy to split or combine (on a molecular level) - but there are other less fundamental factors that make splitting more expensive
@raloed.3636 ай бұрын
Have you heard about Stanley Mayer? he claimed he split water at 1700 + efficiencies. His technology is shrouded in Pseudo science tho. However with things like the 1951 Invention Secrecy act, makes you wonder of this and alot of ree energy devices actually exist but are kept secret from the public.
@danyaeger123456 ай бұрын
@@JohnnyWednesday also in real world reactions, nothing is perfect, some ingredients get lost or don't mix properly, some fuel goes unburnt, etc
@jac5406 ай бұрын
@@perkunast9680 Depends on the definition of efficiency. If you mean thrust to weight it's hard to beat fossil fuels, but also hydrogen might be better than battery-electric propulsion. However, if the goal is to use the least energy possible you definitely can't beat batteries and electric propulsion. "A jet engine can be more powerful and more efficient then a electric one." More efficient definitely not. An electric engine is very efficient, think more than 90%. Combustion engines don't even come close. More powerful is probably right. If I search for horsepower of the Boeing 777 I get an approximation of 175000 horsepower in two motors. If I search for most powerful electric motor I get a horsepowernumber of 49000.
@personalchannelofmine5 ай бұрын
Make a 4 stroke engine that works on water!!
@KrsnGmer5 ай бұрын
He'll be dead within a month 😂😂
@LandoZor5 ай бұрын
last guy who did that was taken care of by the oil companies
@tomiivaswort69215 ай бұрын
I actually wanna see that.
@KrsnGmer5 ай бұрын
@@LandoZor FR
@KrsnGmer5 ай бұрын
@@tomiivaswort6921 it's actually quite possible but not directly water tho
@robertherring34296 ай бұрын
Great ingenuity. Using the disks is an excellent choice. Many times you find the simplest ideas get you much farther along before you start fine-tuning into something more complicated . For amperage control I have many ideas here starting with: What if you were to increase your distance between discs and the number of discs to reduce the amount of amperage draw; adjust your conductive solution ratio, and use a fuse or breaker to protect your batteries. Better yet, use a contactor with overload that we usually call a motor starter assembly with overload relay. They come in many different coil voltages and the overload relay is adjustable in amps that you can set. These have an overload test and reset button. You can utilize a rocker switch to use to initiate the contactor easily per each test. Another idea is use an AC transformer and an AC/DC converter with fuse and a potentiometer to control your voltage and therefore your amp draw. And, another one, adjust the spacing of the disc to reduce the amperage draw at first, and work up. Have you thought of using alternating current and capacitors. I do HVAC and use run capacitors for single phase compressors and motors all the time. There are universal capacitors by Amrad that you can select all sorts of combinations of capacitance. Have fun and God bless
@leroyessel20106 ай бұрын
See @EirexTech in Canada for "Energetic Cavitation Impact" with any type of water that reminds me of Prof Marc Ramsey, Vanderbilt University and his KZbin video 8 years ago.
@jonathancoley9742 күн бұрын
You should definitely make a scooter powered by a water burning motor. That. Would. Be. Siiiiick!
@WildCat18836 ай бұрын
So what I've learned from this video, is that, if you have a large enough battery, you can make a rocket in your back garden.
@MrPoornakumar6 ай бұрын
@elliottoconnor4367 Exactly!
@murffy1236 ай бұрын
Suddenly i came across your video, after seeing the content I feel it's very very informative. In a single video, I came to know about electroplating on plastic, 3D printer lattice, gyroid, about silver properties
@rbmwiv5 ай бұрын
Using a 12v battery charger I was able to fill a 20 gallon trash bag in 10 minutes and attached a time delay fuse on it and let it go. The police were everywhere after that. It shook windows over a 1/2 mile away. It floated up and made a spectacular explosion. My only regret was not having hearing protection. It was extremely loud. Way louder than just hydrogen alone. The two combined are very energetic.
@Zerk885 ай бұрын
FuckinArollbar!!!
@petrjanu46955 ай бұрын
Termobarická puma 😂😂😂 a psi štěkají dodnes😁
@OZTutoh5 ай бұрын
So, how much is bail?
@kyriakos0985 ай бұрын
bro admitted to unregulated bomb detonation for 8 likes 😂😂😂
@juan-2-many5 ай бұрын
@@kyriakos098 best analysis ever. I'm dead 🤣
@harroldwheeler-jr5926Ай бұрын
Hello, really enjoyed and have scanned some of the comments. Two things that I observed. 1) you used 15 plates and the battery overhead. Why not use only 5 or 6. 2) you had the plates stacked horizontally, why not vertical like in a car battery? Would allow for easier movement of the bubbles.
@tomclanys6 ай бұрын
Hi there Integza. In my quest to research an optimal HHO generator I saw researchers and creators making the generator in series instead of parallel. Simply said if you only connect the very opposite plates, isolate the center electrodes, then you don't waste the voltage, since each cell only needs about 1.1V or about so. Also I saw a paper that using a powerful magnetic field (just a magnet) near a HHO generator speeds up the creation of gas, since it somehow makes the flow faster. I also am limited with my power supply to just 5 amps, so I used a DC mode on a MIG welder to deliver 40+ amps on the lowest setting. It worked on a single cell, but almost boiled the water in around a minute. The potential is there, keep trying :)
@jspapp56 ай бұрын
the magnet makes sense, I think oxygen and hydrogen are both magnetic, so it could be pulling them away from the electrodes for more water to react, vs. just buoyancy removing the gasses
@TimYoshi6 ай бұрын
How about adding some flow? Like aquarium/pond pump? Also to solve a boiling problem - how about most adding more water and using a larger container? Water is awesome near the sink due to the large thermal mass.
@ZeusEBoy6 ай бұрын
@@jspapp5yes and also because it helps configure the electron flow to a synchronized direction and speed up the thermal reaction with increased desired outcome and decreased energy waste. Essentially isolating the flow of energy
@chrisbinnie68766 ай бұрын
To remove heat - the electrodes (threaded bolts in this model) could be replaced with pipes. Could act as cooling radiator?
@Mr123bohemian6 ай бұрын
@@tomclanys the reason you boiled the water is you didn't have control of your volts, you are looking at 2.66v across each plate
@serenitas44056 ай бұрын
Water: exists Integza: IT'S FREE REAL ESTATE
@אלוןטל-ט7ל6 ай бұрын
I have been working on a 3D printed modular electrolysis tank, and I only used it in low volumes, but i found several interesting things : 1. graphite is the best electrode (for the positive specifically) because everything else corrodes (I have a jar full of rust sludge from early tests) 2. for the power supply I use two 18650 Li-ion cells, that handle the current very well (for your scale I would suggest a power bank of 10 or just a car battery) 3. I recently switched to solid state electrolyte by adding agar-agar to my liquid electrolyte (along with some antibiotic for long room temp storage, when using the tank the chlorine from the table salt in the solution disinfects it). If you would like I can send you the cad files. Also if you have the sodium hydroxide (which by the way is going to destroy the steel, and probably was electrolysed too partially) and aluminum, you could generate enough hydrogen to keep that engine running until it melts (but it does not generate oxygen, so you would need a gas tank or use hydrogen peroxide decomposition).
@TimYoshi6 ай бұрын
That's what I say - too much voltage currently. 1s li would be perfect. Brilliant idea with graphite!
@אלוןטל-ט7ל6 ай бұрын
@integza3DGiveaway this looks like a scam. could you respond from your the verified channel account please?
@orphax19256 ай бұрын
I'm interested in your choic of a gel-state electrolyte, why do you recommend it ? I would not have tried this as I think the gel will block bubbles from escaping
@אלוןטל-ט7ל6 ай бұрын
@@orphax1925The gel state electrolyte helps to hold the electrolyte, so no problems with leaking corrosive electrolyte or with orientation (as this was designed to be modular and fit designs that may change orientation, and a liquid electrolyte would be pushed out if held up side down). It generally helps with maintenance because it removes the hassle of draining and refilling electrolyte when replacing electrodes and such. Mostly for the orientation though, before the gel I had a "magic sponge" which held the electrolyte and provided constant electrode contact by capillary action, but gel is better for holding and for contact. A disadvantage of gel is the slightly higher resistance, but so far I have found it a very good trade. About contact, I did not run very good tests for this, but i don't think there is a big difference. when using the sponge I printed a cage for the electrodes that pressed on the sponge and let only liquid come in direct contact with the electrode, and the bubbles went up through the liquid. in the gel, the cage is filled with gel (there is gel to gel contact between the electrolyte in the tank and on the electrode), and the bubbles either go up around the electrode or go through tiny holes I punched in the gel with a needle to the gel to gel contact area and go up there. In my tests no bubbles got stuck and the gel to gel contact performed amazingly in connectivity.
@אלוןטל-ט7ל6 ай бұрын
@@orphax1925 I actually got the idea when i was doing an introductory electrochemistry experiment. I had been searching for a way to set the electrolyte for a few weeks by then, and I saw the salt bridge for the cell we were making and thought "if this electrolyte gel is good enough to use as a salt bridge, surely it would have good enough chemical resistance and diffusion for the electrolysis tank".
@clearlakerainАй бұрын
For a 3D Printer: Using the same fellow's method of electrolysis, separate oxygen from H. Then convert the 2 elements to their liquid form under pressure. Incorporate methods established by the paintball industry. Valves and carbon fiber pressure bottles will allow you to use up to 4000psi. By releasing the liquids at precise amounts, they will rapidly turn into their gaseous state ready for ignition. "Huston, we have ignition".
@mmartoccia6 ай бұрын
The amount of effort and creativity in this video is inspiring. Keep pushing the limits, Integza!
@floki_vilgeroarson6 ай бұрын
For your next creation, could you develop a mini jet engine for a remote-controlled vehicle? It would be fascinating to see how you could integrate a jet motor into a small machine.
@Ragnar1056 ай бұрын
Yep
@noebov1376 ай бұрын
The fastest rc car
@pernguin17246 ай бұрын
"I'm prepared because I know I'm an idiot." So releateable 😂
@IdahoPhelanАй бұрын
This is where some material science would come in clutch, where we have some X material introduced to water and it splits water on contact as a catalyst, such as ruthenium dioxide, or three-layer structure of nickel, graphene and a compound of iron, manganese and phosphorus. That way it is no longer an electrical problem for splitting. It is making sure enough is catalyzed in sufficient quantities to produce enough thrust upon its explosion.
@thedarkmonarch6 ай бұрын
guys he has NO suicidal thoughts and does NOT want to kill himself. He also has NO plans to stop content and posting. We gotta keep tabs on this guy and keep him safe. Y'all it's crazy how many people get absolutely pressed over a joke. Relax, kiddos.
@jamesmcd716 ай бұрын
Hydrogen is nothing new. Water is H2O, 2 parts Hydrogen 1 part Oxygen. Everyone who paid attention in 5th grade knows it takes more energy to remove the hydrogen from water than the hydrogen produces. That's called a net loss of energy.
@rovhalt66506 ай бұрын
There's no way to keep him safe unless you're stationed directly outside his house to guard him
@iiRR3lephanttt6 ай бұрын
What am I missing?
@iiRR3lephanttt6 ай бұрын
OHHH if he ends up dead. I get it. Sorry.
@derpnerpwerp6 ай бұрын
Using electrolysis to split water into hydrogen and oxygen for fuel is not a novel thing.. nor is it particularly efficient.
@Parsosti6 ай бұрын
My Dad's so bad in the kitchen that most folks think he can "burn water", but this guy actually does! 🤣
@PunitKumar-q8e6 ай бұрын
Making a small generator to power these electrodes would be a nice theme for a future video.
@Secu902106 ай бұрын
That or using a 1200W or even a 1600W pc power supply would work. They are designed for those massive power loads.
@mokywlmd5726 ай бұрын
@@Secu90210 it will be very nice if he uses a dc regulated power supply, so he could also have a metric of how many amps it is consuming
@LRK-GT6 ай бұрын
@@Secu90210 HP, Dell, etc. 'redundant server PSUs' exist. During the crypto mining craze, all sorts of 'surplus' +12V high-current PSUs were found. $15-50 can get you a 1200-2KW +12VDC PSU, you'll just have to do a lil work to config as a bench PSU. Alternatively, the HP Common Slot ones were so common, there are 'breakout' boards for them, that make the process 'plug and play'.
@mtconlisk2 ай бұрын
I'm sure you've considered it, but I made a hydrogen generator that nearly flash converted the water using a tube and a wire. The tube was my negative connection and the wire was my positive connection. The water inside the tube nearly erupted from the tube. I figure emerging this in water would be the best way to use it, though you may need to send pulses of current to it, to give it time to fill back up.
@KjllShot6 ай бұрын
"If the grapes are more expensive then the bottle, just buy the bottle" 😂 legendary advise grandpa!
@SADCOCK19705 ай бұрын
The process is electrolysis. Hydrolysis is using water to split molecules. The opposite of polymerisation through dehydration.
@DavidJames-v1y5 ай бұрын
And that explains the electroplating of the electrodes
@furqanahmedraza58916 ай бұрын
"I'm an idiot but I'm a prepared one" Integza 2024
@Sundablakr6 ай бұрын
Real engineer talk.
@jb-ik8sjАй бұрын
I made 3 using see through whole house filters and 1 more for safty. I hooked it up to my 91 toyota 4x4 pickup with the 22re engine. The goal was to gain miles per gal. It taught me alot about the next design(that I haven't built yet). What it did was added noticeable HP(not sure how much but when I opened the valve to the i take manifold it jumped slightly). Also the exhaust was 100°F cooler on the freeway and the emissions were incredibly low. And the exhaust was aromatic. Very pleasent to breath. The next design will be what they call a dry cell. Perhaps you should look into that type of design. It's supposed to be way more efficient.
@juanvillagra42806 ай бұрын
I wonder if you already knew this by now, but there is available a 3D printing filament which is water soluble, intended precisely to print the supports with it, so you can easily get rid of them by simply submerging the whole piece in water afterwards.
@noebov1376 ай бұрын
Hi Integza! I love your crazy experiments. For your next video, how about trying to recreate an ancient Leonardo da Vinci device and see if it really works? That would be super interesting!
@Clyves986 ай бұрын
Goodyear idea
@jacocallewaert56326 ай бұрын
thats a great idea
@breakfastcrafty46835 ай бұрын
Create a water powered car without being assassinated by big oil
@briondalion5 ай бұрын
That would be great. All it would need to do is be insulated from the heat of the car, in terms of the water as fuel. The only issue is to create a tank that would be safe from creating leaks, and electrical fires/electrocution risk. Also, one pipe would be needed to pipe the hydrogen and oxygen gas together, but that's going to be a very explosive risk there. Same for how it would need to be ignited in the engine. There would have to be fairly controlled ways of delivering the gases in small amounts in multiple areas with very thin tubing, depending on the engine used. I would assume it would not be an ICE engine, but perhaps one could be designed to run on water. It would be highly complicated.
@паша-н3у5н5 ай бұрын
@@briondalion I'm impressed how you went into so much detail withojt considering first that you need energy for electrolysis. More than you'd ever get from hydrogen combustion
@ibsn875 ай бұрын
Discharging a large Lipo in that amount of time to harness a few bubbles of hydrogen should be enough of a realization that to make hydrogen requires a phenomenal amount of electricity. Then you need to chill it and then compress it. Then you need to transport it and store it. Then you need to maintain the engine that uses it…. Every step requires a phenomenal amount of electricity. If only there was a simpler way….. Imagine if there was a way to generate electricity from your roof, and very directly store it and use it any time you desire…..
@briondalion5 ай бұрын
@@паша-н3у5н oh yeah, sorry yeah, I just got excited. Although if you used a small amount of radioactive material, you could power that for a long while, presumably. Submarines that are powered by nuclear energy need almost no material in terms of the size...different energy needs, however. Yes it would be more energy used, but it would keep cars cleaner, especially if it's Thorium that is used. Or, perhaps, the car could have a body made out of specially shaped solar panels, all over the car. It might not be net zero energy, but it would be cleaner. It could also be a very small ICE that compliments an electric car, so it can go further in distance. Or, my idea is bad, I'm not sure. That fact about the more energy needed slipped my mind. I'm just passionate haha
@nemesisnick665 ай бұрын
@@ibsn87 Bob Lazar already solved the hydrogen storage problem decades ago
@IvorKlooАй бұрын
I have learnt so much (62years), and it has inspired me to follow you and CAREFULLY. Experiment.! Thank you
@jordondoesthings5 ай бұрын
I hope this guy doesn't mysteriously die any time soon
@arthurrodgers4794 ай бұрын
True... The guy that invited the car that ran on water mysteriously died by poisoning! All of his equipment and papers disappeared.
@arthurrodgers4794 ай бұрын
Invented*
@uap244 ай бұрын
The downside is that you are using electrolysis to make hydrogen, and electrolysis is wasteful.
@jordondoesthings4 ай бұрын
@@uap24 precisely
@infantjones4 ай бұрын
@@arthurrodgers479 Stan Meyer died 8 years after he went public and filed patent requests, the designs are public, in those 8 years he had gotten media coverage by gullible local journalists, was giving presentations trying to pull investors, had then been sued by investors he conned, etc. If someone was trying to suppress it they would have killed him when those patent requests were filed. Instead, he at the age of 58 suddenly started feeling very ill when his chronic high blood pressure resulted in an aneurysm when he was meeting with two of his long term investors, he believed he was poisoned because of this ill feeling, and died of said aneurysm. His designs weren't suppressed (he filed publicly available patent requests!), no one can replicate them because they do not work nor are they capable of working in the way he described.
@AintYourChannel6 ай бұрын
You know you've done something right when so many of the comments are providing constructive feedback! This is fascinating stuff, can't wait to see how you improve upon this design!
@jeronomojoe6 ай бұрын
Awesome video Integza! Chopping those lattices up into thin discs was very smart. I'd like to point out to the comments section that Stanley Meyer did NOT use traditional electrolysis as he stated multiple times in interviews and lectures. His designs were way more complex. Put stupid simple he used pulsed high voltage fields at specific resonant frequencies to break apart the h20 molecules. You can think of the cell as a type of capacitor with water itself being the dielectric. Later he designed water fuel injectors that used lasers in a resonant cavity to create a similar breakdown and discharge of energy. He also designed a special type of circuit called the Voltage Intenstifier Circuit or VIC which drastcially lowerd current without resistance by creating a choke of sorts with the back emf of the coils. It utlizes the same concepts which the Late Lt. Colonel Tom Bearden talked about with Scalar Potenials and scalar back emf. Keep in mind Bearden was a Nuclear engineer in the Army who worked on numerous Unacknowledged special acess projects or USAPs not a crackpot just another guy who figured it out. Stanley Meyer wasn't some guy in his garage. He spent decades of his life developing this technology surrounded by engineers and scientists in a lab.
@Ditmore1776A.D21 күн бұрын
I love everything about this design and I can see areas of improvement. A Air to Water device and solar powered, I love see how this works out
@floridamangaming24536 ай бұрын
Uhhh... hey Papyrus... I burned the water
@TlalocTemporal6 ай бұрын
You WHAT?
@notsharing58874 ай бұрын
this channel just hits different when I watch him it feels more like my cousin has gotten the money to do all the random ideas he gets and wants to show them to me I absolutely love it
@Think-Harder-Duh6 ай бұрын
It would be awesome to see this miniaturized even more and implemented into an RC plane/jet to see how it would fly and hold up.
@tygo950027 күн бұрын
Ive built a 1.5kw hydrolizer. Every elektrolyte reacts differently. I used KOH as electrolyte. The law of faraday says to use between 1.5 to 2v per active cell. Above this voltage the electrolizer will work as a heater, with poor efficiency. With the 1.5kw i have built, it makes a 5L/min of HHO. Also make the electrolizer of stainless steel. (I dont remember using 304 or 316. It is important that the KOH will not oxidize the plates. My cell was a 6s2p configuration. 12/6 is 2v per cell. Let me know if you want to know more. I can search the sources of the above information. Edit: also be sure to have 1.5 to 2mm between the plates. You want the bubbles to escape quickly vibrating other bubbles of the plates aswell while keeping the resistance as low as possible.
@ScandalistRick6 ай бұрын
Integza finally getting into hydrogen!!! I've been dabbling with ideas on making a fun electric generator out of hydrogen. The basis of the generation will simply be a weight on a string, through a gearing mechanism, to a generator. As the weight moves down, the string will rotate a gearing mechanism which will rotate the generator. In this setup I would have the HO fed into a cylinder via a gas check valve, the 'piston' in this cylinder will double as the weight. The weight will slowly drop while generating electricity, and at a certain level it will flash an igniter in the cylinder. As the HO is ignited, with nowhere to escape it will push the weighted piston back up. A light spring mechanism will wind the excess string up as the weight lifts, and the system is reset and ready for more. The last thing I haven't quite figured is safely controlling the flow of hydrogen after the arrestor, but if anyone can figure it out my faith is in you.
@אלוןטל-ט7ל6 ай бұрын
Maybe you could use efussion, if you have constant feed pressure and a known combustion chamber pressure you could use a valve that is a very thin wall with a hole of varying radius, and you could easily calculate the flow from the pressure difference and hole area
@merchantman56356 ай бұрын
epic perpetual motion scam bro
@ScandalistRick6 ай бұрын
@@merchantman5635 For anyone confused by this comment; burning a mole of hydrogen will produce the same amount of energy that it takes to split a mole of water. Couple this fact with that of 'no machine is perfectly efficient', you are looking at an energy deficit of at least 25%. This is just a fun project, which I will probably use to teach my children various things.
@ferrumignis6 ай бұрын
@@ScandalistRick _"burning a mole of hydrogen will produce the same amount of energy that it takes to split a mole of water."_ Not true. Current industrial processes can approach 80% and ongoing research suggests we could get as high as 95% but a simple DIY low temperature, low pressure electrolysis cells is going to be more like 50%.
@ScandalistRick6 ай бұрын
@@ferrumignis Dude I was talking about in a perfect scenario... Like on paper. Hence why I mentioned inefficiencies later. I also said "at least" which encompasses all of the percentages you just listed. What is your goal here, or do you just enjoy arguing? Fucking Oscar.
@ESportsEnthusiast6 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for this video! It shows good character that you were able to pivot to a simpler design and execute. Its so nice to see people publishing this kind of process.
@Andy-hu1fw6 ай бұрын
This video has everything I like combined, good job
@rickpontificates3406Ай бұрын
Congratulations! You combined hydrolysis, electrolysis, and electroplating 👍