Ref : http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/m59183.html
RE: CS>ozone machines,,
From: Harvey Norris (view other messages by this author)
Date: Mon, 19 May 2003 23:32:50

  > The GREAT expenses here are that large induction  coils, employing
  > some 40,000 ohms impedance are on either side of the CS  cell, but
  > with capacities having identical impedances in series, this serves
  > to regulate  the voltage in such a way as to continually  lower it
  > to the lowest possible value that the C.L. setting will provide.

  Harvey,

  I know a bit about resonance, and would like to model  your circuit.
  Can you supply the following information:

  1. What is the inductance of L1 and L2.

  2. What is the coil diameter.

  3. What is the coil thickness.

  4. How many turns of wire are needed.

  5. What gauge of wire is used.

  6. What is the dc resistance of the coil.

  7. What is the value of C1 and C2.

  8. What is the circuit Q.

  9. What is the input current from the variac.

  10. What is the circulating current at resonance.

  11. What is the voltage across the tank at resonance.

  12. What is the impedance of the colloidal silver cell.

  13. How much does the circuit Q change as the ions enter solution.

  14. How are you introducing current from the variac.

  15. How are you extracting current from the tank.

  Let me state my concerns.

  You state the reactance of the coil is 40,000 ohms. From the formula
  for reactance,

  XL = 2 * pi * F * L

  Therefore

  L = XL / 2 * pi * F
    = 40000 / (2 * pi * 60)
    = 106.1033 Henries

  An 106 Henry air wound coil would be enormous. It would fill a room.

  The coil  would  have very high losses.  Without  going  through the
  calculations, I estimate the Q would be less than 1. There  would be
  no resonance effect.

  Your circuit is impossible to create. Given a single  resonant tank,
  you would  have to introduce the current from the  variac  in series
  with the circuit. If you connected the variac in parallel,  it would
  short out the tank and prevent any resonance.

  Since the variac is in series with the tank, the only way  you could
  obtain a  resonance effect would be to take the  voltage  across the
  tank, or  in parallel with L1 and C1. However,  your  description is
  the cell is also in series with the tank.

  Since you must introduce the current from the variac in  series with
  the tank,  then  both  tanks must have equal  currents  that  are in
  phase. It  is impossible to get opposing currents from two  tanks as
  you claim.

  If you  could  somehow get opposing currents,  basic  network theory
  shows the vector sum is zero. There would be no current  through the
  cell.

  Your grasp  of circuit theory is very limited, and  your terminology
  is not accurate. For example, there is no term called "amperage".

  Your circuit  is a complete fabrication. It does not  exist,  and it
  cannot be built.

  You have been lying to the members of this group. You are a troll.

  Your stories  might  be entertaining to the  other  members  of your
  Tesla group, but they have no place here.

  I seriously  doubt you even have enough knowledge of  electronics to
  fake the data I requested above.

Best Regards,

Mike Monett


--
The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver.

Instructions for unsubscribing may be found at: http://silverlist.org

To post, address your message to: [email protected]

Silver-list archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html

List maintainer: Mike Devour <[email protected]>