Blank>>We were able to drop out some white powder precipitate one a single
occasion some time back.
>>We had forgotten to turn off the test unit over the lunch hour. Never
>>able to reproduce the event in our steel test tank. The municipal source
of our water supply could
>>have had been hypo-chlorinated that day... or some chemical agent
>>to reduce manganese.. or visa-verse. Using a plexiglas tank with aluminum
frame and municipal
>>chlorinated water  would occasionally produce the precipitate and severely
oxidize the aluminum.

R.C.

I have not duplicated you setup, yet I have never seem Cl released as a
White precipitate?

You mention 'manganese' is this part of your electrolyte? If not I might
suggest you start drinking bottled water or maybe a good Brandy :-)

  -----Original Message-----
  From: RC Macaulay [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent: Thursday, November 16, 2006 7:28 AM
  To: [email protected]
  Subject: [VO]:Re: Magnetic effect on water


  Michael Foster wrote..

  >Somewhere on Bill's endlessly large website is an
  experiment showing that exposure to a magnetic field
  increases the viscosity of water.  This is such an
  easy thing to test that I tried it.  It really works.

  At first I thought that this is mysterious and inexplicable.
  Then it occurred to me that since water molecules are
  electric dipoles, they would be subject to the Lenz effect
  when in a magnetic field, i.e., they would resist a change
  in orientation.  Since the normal random thermal motion of
  the molecules would be more or less restricted, depending
  on the strength of the magnetic field, the rise in temperature
  of the water to ambient would be suppressed.

  This might also explain the precipitate.  The normal Brownian
  motion caused by thermal agitation would also be suppressed,
  resulting in the water's inability to keep small paricles in
  suspension.  The water would have to have some fine particulate
  impurity in the first place for this to happen.

  And here's some speculation:  Suppose you place a beaker full
  of water inside a larger container with a non-polar liquid.
  Expose these to a strong magnetic field.  Would the water
  become colder and the non-polar liquid hotter?  Anti-entropic?
  Naaah.


  Howdy Michael,

  We were able to drop out some white powder precipitate one a single
occasion some time back.We had forgotten to turn off the test unit over the
lunch hour. Never able to reproduce the event in our steel test tank. The
municipal source of our water supply could have had been hypo-chlorinated
that day... or some chemical agent to reduce manganese.. or visa-verse.
Using a plexiglas tank with aluminum frame and municipal chlorinated water
would occasionally produce the precipitate and severely oxidize the
aluminum.

  You idea of using a non-polar liquid is intriguing. Glad we have been
giving the next test rig modular design theme some time for input like your
speculation. If you would like to see a pic of the present setup I can send
you a pdf.

  Richard



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