Jeff,
Good point.
And also IF (big if) the double-bound oxygen comes into play...
....as in a hypothetical hydrino reaction (one of many possible active
reactions, in addition to LENR), then it should be noted that...
... "acrylic" (aka plexiglas or plexi) is the name for the resin of
Polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) or poly (methyl 2-methylpropenoate) which
DO have the double bond !!
In fact, the proportion of c=O appears to be greater than in
polycarbonate and it should be more active, but OTOH - it is is not
nearly as strong.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polymethyl_methacrylate
BTW Jeff - if your cavitation pump is still operative, you can probably
reduce a few grams of acrylic to a fine powder and then dissolve it with
a solvent like carbon tetrachloride (nasty stuff). When in a dissolved
state and then thinned with an alcohol - perhaps it would not gum up it
the pump - although this might be a good time to talk to an expert on
such things.
Jones
Jeff Fink wrote:
Consider Michael Foster’s post of 7-1-07 on the Griggs cavitator along
with subsequent posts by Jones Beene.
Now, recall Mike Huffman’s cavitation experiment where he achieved
overunity torque along with perhaps some harmful radiation by using an
acrylic case and rotor.
Suppose Michael would put a slurry of water and acrylic particles into
his Griggs cavitator? Any speculation on what would happen?
Jeff
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