It's easier to do Rectangular plates for making the cell, but harder to pressure-vacuum package than circular concentric cells.
Ours is rectangular. built in a heavy wall hexagonal gallon size glass jug and assembled like building "a ship in a bottle". My "colleague", 1800 miles to the east, was anxious to get started bottling free energy. After a $61.25 gift credit card fill-up at the gas pump for my daughter's Dodge Durango (I sold it to her for a $1.00 for commuting on I-25 and I-40 Albuquerque "freeways") to her elementary school teaching job, who wouldn't be? :-) Fred > [Original Message] > From: Jones Beene <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: <[email protected]> > Date: 5/17/2006 8:22:28 AM > Subject: Re: Stainless Steel Cover Plate Experiment > > Fred, > > > Ours is like the Joe Cell, or now Klein's patent application. > > There seems to be no good reason that the electrode geometry needs > to be cylindrical (except that Meyer and Joe both chose it) - OTOH > electrode "surface area" (as opposed to geometry) does seem to be > important. > > Are you roughing up or etching the plates to increase surface > area? > > Jones

