"Water Fuel Cell / Resonant Cavity" construction and ideas!!


~Russ

RE: "Water Fuel Cell / Resonant Cavity" construction and ideas!!
« Reply #2, on October 21st, 2011, 09:35 AM »Last edited on December 23rd, 2011, 12:28 PM by ~Russ/Rwg42985
(This post was edited from is original content.)

loving that one H20!

i have seen the other cells you have been working on and those photos are what i needed to really see the ER-10! nice!!

Stan would be proud! indeed!

Thanks for the high Quilting photos!

 Hope you have sold some!

thanks, ~Russ








Dwiman89

RE: "Water Fuel Cell / Resonant Cavity" construction and ideas!!
« Reply #10, on January 30th, 2012, 05:14 PM »
Hey guys,

    Im new here. Im still trying to wrap my head around all of it. I have two questions about this particular design concept. I want to start off by building my own cell. I want a make a 12 cell array, similar to the one Stan has on his buggy. I still dont fully understand the relationship with the fuel cell and the electronics.

1) I know the gap is important and that there is supposed to be an equation for it, but does it matter how long the anode and cathode are? I figure go longer then the 4" and 2.75".(more surface area.)

2) Does the tubes have to be cut to match the frequency of the other? like the two gaps at the top and bottom of the inner tube?

Jeff Nading

RE: "Water Fuel Cell / Resonant Cavity" construction and ideas!!
« Reply #11, on January 30th, 2012, 07:37 PM »
Quote from Dwiman89 on January 30th, 2012, 05:14 PM
Hey guys,

    Im new here. Im still trying to wrap my head around all of it. I have two questions about this particular design concept. I want to start off by building my own cell. I want a make a 12 cell array, similar to the one Stan has on his buggy. I still dont fully understand the relationship with the fuel cell and the electronics.

1) I know the gap is important and that there is supposed to be an equation for it, but does it matter how long the anode and cathode are? I figure go longer then the 4" and 2.75".(more surface area.)

2) Does the tubes have to be cut to match the frequency of the other? like the two gaps at the top and bottom of the inner tube?
One video I have seen where Stan was running his buggy with his fuel cell array but the other video's show an injector sparkplug configuration. For an equation go to this thread and download the calculator, http://open-source-energy.org/?tid=180  , this might help. So the fuel cell array was just a stepping stone to the injector system and not part of the finished product . There have been those who went to great lengths to tune the tubes to each other, like myself, I don't think it matters that much. Watch my video of a one cell I built  https://www.youtube.com/user/nadingjeff?feature=mhee#p/u/22/3dwonCXH5EI , and now a 9 cell array I am building https://www.youtube.com/user/nadingjeff?feature=mhee#p/u/23/AeA9N-PPyGc , so again I don't think it matters of the length either. The spacing between the tubes does matter, I used zip ties in the first video they spaced the tubes very well. There is a web site called Panacea university, there is a guy there that built a fuel cell and gives specs on the tubes he used. One other thing is the conditioning of the tubes, he also gives specs on this. Hope this helps , Jeff.:D

Gambino

RE: "Water Fuel Cell / Resonant Cavity" construction and ideas!!
« Reply #12, on March 15th, 2012, 06:02 PM »
Does anyone have the spec's to replicate Stan Meyers WFC?
I am looking for dimensions and associated data so I can build one to the same design.

I did not see anything specific in the patent documents.





Jeff Nading

RE: "Water Fuel Cell / Resonant Cavity" construction and ideas!!
« Reply #15, on March 16th, 2012, 09:29 AM »Last edited on March 16th, 2012, 10:49 AM by Jeff Nading
Quote from Jean-Alexandre on March 16th, 2012, 09:09 AM
Hello,

very nice
but where are you find all meterial ?
PVC ?

alex
Well, if you have a 3d printer you could print them out in abs plastic, http://open-source-energy.org/?fid=40  you could source the materials out locally or from the internet. Check this link out as well, http://open-source-energy.org/?tid=394&pid=3650#pid3650  Have fun.