----- Original Message ----- From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Suppose I built one but did not want to use my Scion for experimentation, how could I "test the water" so to speak?

Terry


I am planning on trying to prove/disprove that part of the equation (pretreatment) soon. A simple but meaningful test would be something like this: Prepare several batches of 100 gram (or more) water samples - and then heat for exactly one minute each in a microwave oven - then test for temperature rise with a digital thermometer... using several iterations of:

1) untreated rainwater vs.
2) treated rainwater vs
3) untreated municipal water (control) vs
4) treated municipal water.

Many other types of water may be tested.

I suspect the treated rainwater, since it may have more hydroxyl radicals (if there are indeed solar hydrinos in rainwater), will heat up significantly faster. The devil is in the details, but if there is nothing significant in this simple kind of experiment - then this solar-hydrino-hypothesis is likely incorrect, and it will be time to move on to some other hypothesis.

Perhaps in the best-case scenario - the treated water might even explode after a short time in the oven - if fully electrolyzed for 10-12 hours in one of the alternative JoeCell regimes - which looks to be the most promising method - using a battery or battery charger (drawing a fractional watt per hour - a few watts total per liter).

The idea of pretreatment is apparently that you are trying to "force" the maximum unbalanced negative charge into a nearly pure dielectric in order to displace the ppm quantities of (negative) hydrinohydrides which are already there, and then using them in turn to force the remaining water, over time, into a changed nanostructure - to form "strings" of hydronium and hydroxyl-hydrate bound and linked ions (the polywater analogy) or else some kind of natural clathrate water structure --- Fred mentioned a few of these water structures, and more are on the Chaplin site; such that after an extended treatment, the water is near-neutral in pH, discolored with colloidal scum, higher in viscosity, and has a large "hidden" capacitance. It is said by the JC enthusiasts, that one will get a huge shock just by touching it (with bare feet).

Shocking, indeed....

Jones



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