If I get ambitious enough to build the cell for use on the
$195.00 4-cycle (0.97 cubic inch) Remote Control (RC) model ICE I ordered.
Easier to use in the kitchen using an electric drill or screwdriver to crank
it over, and small $2.00 Radioshack DC motors as generators for load testing;
I would mount a stack of 2 inch "shallow pan" using 316L stainless bands
for the electrolysis cells rather than the 10 inch depth (SS tubing) called for
in the low pressure chamber so that the "Brown's Gas" yield would be greater, ie., the
energy-wasting recombination of 2 H to H2 or 2 O to O2 etc. would
be less.
A friend in Michigan got a cost estimate on the Joe Cell from a machine shop.
It was a pricey $1,200.00. :-)
Fred
----- Original Message -----From: Frederick SparberTo: vortex-lSent: 5/10/2006 1:42:46 AMSubject: RE: Joe Cell TheoriesThe Joe Cell plans call for a 2 inch diameter cathodesurrounded by three concentric floating cylinders3 inch, 4 inch, 5 inch, surrounded by the 6 inch diameter anode.For water with Megohm-meter resistivity (rho) between the cylindersthe resistance R = rho*spacing/Area acts as a resistance-capacitancedivider allowing small current flow at 12 to 15 volts DC.OTOH, the electric fields at the Metal-Water Interfaces(about 0.7 Square Meters Area) with the 4 cellsdividing the voltage into electrolysis cells with about 3 voltsacross each, approach over a Billion Volts/Meter (1.5 volts/nanometer is used forhigh field emission of electrons)which can allow Autoionization H3O+ or H+ Cations to pull electronsfrom the metal cathode, or allow the metal anodes to pull electrons fromthe water Autoionization OH - Anions.This mechanism can allow copious production of O, OH, and O2 gasesat the anode surfaces and H and H2 gases at the cathodes of the four seriescells mixed with H2O vapor that can be drawn into the ICE cylinderswhere compression-combustion occurs. It Burns Water. :-)Cylindrical CapacitanceCapacitance Divider:Resistivity and Conductivity:No links found for concentric resistance calculation. ran out of gas.Fred

