On Dec 3, 2011, at 2:01 PM, Peter Heckert wrote:

Am 03.12.2011 23:51, schrieb Horace Heffner:

On Dec 3, 2011, at 1:30 PM, Peter Heckert wrote:

Am 03.12.2011 23:00, schrieb Horace Heffner:
Say, Bill Beaty's experiments made it as a reference on wikipedia!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_thread_experiment

Yes, this experiment was made by others too and published in science journals.

It must be seen that a strong current flows through the water thread. This means there is a voltage gradient in the water thread. If the threa becomes thinner, the resistance will increase and at this position the voltage will increase and electrostatic forces pull the thread together. So the thread is in an dynamic equilibrium of electrostatic forces and pinching.
In some videos it can be seen that the thread becomes boiling hot.

Ethanol does also conduct some electricity, also glycol and glycerine.
The resistance is some megohm between to wires in the fluid.
I believe, the effect is not specific to water and could be done with these fluids also.
I tried it, but my HV source did not deliver enough power.
This experiment consumes some ten to hundred Watts.

Peter

Bill Beaty's water threads consumed very little power. He used an about 10 micro-amp negative ion generator power supply, at 10-15 kV.

http://amasci.com/weird/unusual/airhard.html

http://amasci.com/emotor/negion.html

I dont believe, he used this for the water thread experiment.

You are confusing the wiki experiment with Bill Beaty's experiment.

Read the references I provided.

This needs more current.
I tried with deionized water, but my supply was too week. It should deliver about 100µA. Its a TV split diode flyback transformer driven by a selfbuild electronics.

Peter


Best regards,

Horace Heffner
http://www.mtaonline.net/~hheffner/




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