In reply to  francis 's message of Wed, 25 Aug 2010 18:36:46 -0400:
Hi,

I suspect that the high frequency AC ionizes the water to some extent, creating
a mixture of different ions and atoms. This leaves room for atomic H and perhaps
also some O++, both of which are the stuff of Mills' catalysis. In short, I
think Hydrinos could easily be forming, which if it were happening efficiently,
would lead to on average about 100 fold increase in energy output, which seems
to be roughly what they are getting.
(Gas production is about 100 times what would be expected from electrolysis).
Further Hydrino amplification may be occurring in the engine due to the ignition
spark.

>Esa Ruoho said on Wed, 25 Aug 2010 13:47:29
>
>as usual for Peswiki - no replications.
>http://peswiki.com/index.php/Directory:_Hydrogen_Hog_by_Future_Energy_Concep
>ts%2C_Inc
>
> 
>
>I have been following claims for excess energy from these HHO kits ever
>since I started comparing the Rowan replications to the Haisch and Moddel
>patent. I don't think HHO plates ever achieve  Casimir geometry but they do
>beg the question if energy invested in EM suppression can create a variety
>of different energy densities based on EM/ waveguide suppression like the
>1mm spacing between nested tubes in the Hog device. The range of density
>values might be less but you gain relative motion since the tube spacing is
>going to mechanically vary at its resonant frequency as well as assist in
>circulation of the gas. I am not suggesting any fractional hydrogen is being
>supplied to the engine but rather anomalous heat is aiding the
>disassociation of fractional hydrogen to reduce the cost below the energy
>released when h2 forms a bond. This isn't violating COE  if the energy is
>coming from the opposition of  covalent bonds to changes in energy density.
>My premise is that h1 translates freely through changes in energy density
>but h2 does not. Mills device depends on collisions and runaway thermals but
>perhaps the PWM simply helps coordinate the disassociation to occur while
>the discount is greatest and before the opposition by the covalent bond can
>dissipate into redirected motion,
>
>Regards
>
>Fran
Regards,

Robin van Spaandonk

http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/Project.html

Reply via email to