Howdy, Bob. I've always used 2 bubblers with HHO devices to prevent flashback and never had any issues (meaning I've had flashbacks but they've all been stopped by the bubblers); ditto several people I know that have been experimenting with it for decades. If you want to ensure the gas is dry I've been told that bead-filled units like you can get from https://www.greenfuelh2o.com/product/high-output-hho-flashback-arrestor-dryer/ are the way to go, although I've not used them myself. If I did use one I'd still have a water-filled bubbler between it and the generation unit to be on the safe side.
FYI William Rhodes is the first person I've been able to find who started using HHO seriously, although Yull Brown popularised it more - see https://patents.google.com/patent/US3310483A/en. In case you've not come across him George Wiseman has done a huge amount of research on HHO, although he's concentrating more on using it for plant growth and health these days - https://eagle-research.life/browns-gas/.
Thanks for all the hard work you're doing and all of the sharing.
True; I've not see any mention of Rhodes talking about transmutation. I knew someone who had a Rhodes cell and kept on getting brown gunk build up despite the plates being stainless steel and using filtered water; he eventually got a mate to analyse it & found all sorts of interesting elements; I'm kicking myself that I didn't get a copy of the printout at the time.
BTW on an entirely different note - I'm a research scientist & have been looking for better models of the universe for decades having worked out fundamental issues in Chemistry by 1986 & most of Physics a few years after that. Whilst SAM is a good start I find it lacking in a few key areas; the best model I've found so far is a combination of the work by Miles Mathis, leading into Electric Universe; I've summarised this at
with pages on the rest of the website leading up to this & giving details on how I came to all of this, and whilst I think Per Bak's "simplicity leading to complexity" is the best model of nature. I think this model makes it a lot easier to understand what is happening with the interesting discoveries you've been coming across and making yourself, and would help in designing future experiments.
Also in case you've not come across it you might find the following interesting:
The oxy acetalyne unit that was left in gold beach I restored , one if the gauges on it had a ruptured gauge inside the curved system that registered pressure was ruptured if somebody had turned it on would have been a mess so I replaced both gauges and I then used spark arrestors so in the long run it was very safe to use I would love to learn welding as I have projects like all those 20 mm oerlikons I have and mounts geeeeeeeee
Howdy, Bob. I've always used 2 bubblers with HHO devices to prevent flashback and never had any issues (meaning I've had flashbacks but they've all been stopped by the bubblers); ditto several people I know that have been experimenting with it for decades. If you want to ensure the gas is dry I've been told that bead-filled units like you can get from https://www.greenfuelh2o.com/product/high-output-hho-flashback-arrestor-dryer/ are the way to go, although I've not used them myself. If I did use one I'd still have a water-filled bubbler between it and the generation unit to be on the safe side.
FYI William Rhodes is the first person I've been able to find who started using HHO seriously, although Yull Brown popularised it more - see https://patents.google.com/patent/US3310483A/en. In case you've not come across him George Wiseman has done a huge amount of research on HHO, although he's concentrating more on using it for plant growth and health these days - https://eagle-research.life/browns-gas/.
Thanks for all the hard work you're doing and all of the sharing.
HI Peter,
Yes, bubblers are good. Slobodan has a bubbler as you can see in the videos.
Good tip on the dryer.
Rhodes may have been first, however, I do not recall him having demonstrated nuclear transmutations.
Eagle Research is probably the most detailed research available.
True; I've not see any mention of Rhodes talking about transmutation. I knew someone who had a Rhodes cell and kept on getting brown gunk build up despite the plates being stainless steel and using filtered water; he eventually got a mate to analyse it & found all sorts of interesting elements; I'm kicking myself that I didn't get a copy of the printout at the time.
BTW on an entirely different note - I'm a research scientist & have been looking for better models of the universe for decades having worked out fundamental issues in Chemistry by 1986 & most of Physics a few years after that. Whilst SAM is a good start I find it lacking in a few key areas; the best model I've found so far is a combination of the work by Miles Mathis, leading into Electric Universe; I've summarised this at
https://thehonestscientist.com/miles-mathis/
with pages on the rest of the website leading up to this & giving details on how I came to all of this, and whilst I think Per Bak's "simplicity leading to complexity" is the best model of nature. I think this model makes it a lot easier to understand what is happening with the interesting discoveries you've been coming across and making yourself, and would help in designing future experiments.
Also in case you've not come across it you might find the following interesting:
http://www.rexresearch.com/fukushimamour/fukushima.htm
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z3ExTkjYXWY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cVeJXBar-sQ&t=970s
I bought two on eBay for ixyacetalybe torch I fully restored in gold beach
I used for metal work building my cannons carriages parts great video on safety
The oxy acetalyne unit that was left in gold beach I restored , one if the gauges on it had a ruptured gauge inside the curved system that registered pressure was ruptured if somebody had turned it on would have been a mess so I replaced both gauges and I then used spark arrestors so in the long run it was very safe to use I would love to learn welding as I have projects like all those 20 mm oerlikons I have and mounts geeeeeeeee