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#1
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Tony Jaa wrote:
Water burns! Man looking for cancer cure hopes to solve energy crisis ... This video: http://youtube.com/watch?v=Lud1qceKqyQ shows John Kanzius sticking his hand into the field/path of the RF from the machine--I doubt if that is a microwave freq. I can't seem to find a link on the man which states the freq(s) he is using ... Regards, JS |
#2
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John Smith I wrote:
Tony Jaa wrote: Water burns! Man looking for cancer cure hopes to solve energy crisis ... This video: http://youtube.com/watch?v=Lud1qceKqyQ shows John Kanzius sticking his hand into the field/path of the RF from the machine--I doubt if that is a microwave freq. I can't seem to find a link on the man which states the freq(s) he is using ... Regards, JS http://youtube.com/watch?v=CwughofIC...elated&search= http://youtube.com/watch?v=P9LhJ0AqI...elated&search= A couple more links, including one where a congressman is getting involved and advocating federal funding for development of this mans discovery ... Regards, JS |
#3
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![]() "John Smith I" wrote in message ... John Smith I wrote: Tony Jaa wrote: Water burns! Man looking for cancer cure hopes to solve energy crisis ... This video: http://youtube.com/watch?v=Lud1qceKqyQ shows John Kanzius sticking his hand into the field/path of the RF from the machine--I doubt if that is a microwave freq. I can't seem to find a link on the man which states the freq(s) he is using ... Regards, JS http://youtube.com/watch?v=CwughofIC...elated&search= http://youtube.com/watch?v=P9LhJ0AqI...elated&search= A couple more links, including one where a congressman is getting involved and advocating federal funding for development of this mans discovery ... Regards, JS It doesnt take much to tell that the flame is a plasma arc, not hydrogen as claimed. A neon sign transformer would probably be much more efficent. |
#4
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Jimmie D wrote:
... It doesnt take much to tell that the flame is a plasma arc, not hydrogen as claimed. A neon sign transformer would probably be much more efficent. The whole point of the paper towel is to prove it is not a plasma arc, which would burn the paper towel ... View it again ... JS |
#5
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![]() "John Smith I" wrote in message ... Jimmie D wrote: ... It doesnt take much to tell that the flame is a plasma arc, not hydrogen as claimed. A neon sign transformer would probably be much more efficent. The whole point of the paper towel is to prove it is not a plasma arc, which would burn the paper towel ... View it again ... JS Maybe not if it is wet with salt water. If that were hydrogen you wouldnt even see the flame. There are no bubbles of gas in the tube. Ive seen plasma flame very similar to this when playing with an old microwave. While zapping old disk I have seen plasma flames that look exacltly like thiose rise up from the disk, hey maybe thats a new form of energy too. Jimmie |
#6
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Jimmie D wrote:
... Sodium Chloride (salt) contains sodium (DUH! Huh?), well guess what, sodium ions impart a yellow color to the flame and make it visible. Hydrogen is lighter than air (the hindenburg! Duh, again!) this makes the gas being emitted very anxious to head towards the ceiling. This also is causing heat to be convected upwards RAPIDLY! Result, paper towel is unburned. If it were a plasma arc, the paper towel would be one electrode. Ever see electrodes made of metal melt in a plasma arc? Carbon electrodes burn away? Nuff said ... Regards, JS |
#7
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On Jun 5, 7:24 am, Jim Higgins wrote:
It's induction coupled plasma, not arc discharge plasma. But let's explore the claim that the water is "burning." If water burns, what are the reactants and what are the reaction products? If it's hydrogen that's burning, then it was derived from the water by applying enough energy to split the water molecule... and if this is really the case then you've input as much energy in the form of RF as you get back by burning the (allegedly) produced hydrogen. Not necessarily. It could be more, less, or the same depending on the precise nature of the reaction. There's this nagging little thing called conservation of energy and matter and getting more energy out of this particular system than you put into it is a violation of the fundamental laws of physics and chemistry. True, but one must also consider the initial and final chemical energy states in order to make a complete energy analysis. One can, for example, obtain a great deal of energy from gasoline by expending a small amount of ignition energy without violating conservation of energy. Thanks for the interesting induction coupled plasma discussion. 73, ac6xg What's really happening is that electrons are being excited to higher energy levels by application of an intense RF field and upon "falling back" to their original state release the difference in energy between the higher and lower states. It's not "burning" in the classic sense of the term. Here's a decent explanation of how induction coupled plasma is used in analytical chemistry.http://www.cee.vt.edu/ewr/environmen...r/icp/icp.html This invention will never withstand strict scientific review because it will be trivial to demonstrate that it doesn't produce more power than is input in the form of RF. No net excess power produced means no new power source. It's almost frightening that hams would consider the claims for this thing to be valid. Not that I expect hams to be competent in every scientific discipline, but there are some basic fundamentals applicable to how the universe operates...- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
#8
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On 5 Jun, 07:24, Jim Higgins wrote:
On Mon, 04 Jun 2007 18:42:00 -0700, John Smith I wrote: Jimmie D wrote: ... Sodium Chloride (salt) contains sodium (DUH! Huh?), well guess what, sodium ions impart a yellow color to the flame and make it visible. Hydrogen is lighter than air (the hindenburg! Duh, again!) this makes the gas being emitted very anxious to head towards the ceiling. This also is causing heat to be convected upwards RAPIDLY! Result, paper towel is unburned. If it were a plasma arc, the paper towel would be one electrode. Ever see electrodes made of metal melt in a plasma arc? Carbon electrodes burn away? Nuff said ... Regards, JS It's induction coupled plasma, not arc discharge plasma. But let's explore the claim that the water is "burning." If water burns, what are the reactants and what are the reaction products? If it's hydrogen that's burning, then it was derived from the water by applying enough energy to split the water molecule... and if this is really the case then you've input as much energy in the form of RF as you get back by burning the (allegedly) produced hydrogen. There's this nagging little thing called conservation of energy and matter and getting more energy out of this particular system than you put into it is a violation of the fundamental laws of physics and chemistry. What's really happening is that electrons are being excited to higher energy levels by application of an intense RF field and upon "falling back" to their original state release the difference in energy between the higher and lower states. It's not "burning" in the classic sense of the term. Here's a decent explanation of how induction coupled plasma is used in analytical chemistry.http://www.cee.vt.edu/ewr/environmen...r/icp/icp.html This invention will never withstand strict scientific review because it will be trivial to demonstrate that it doesn't produce more power than is input in the form of RF. No net excess power produced means no new power source. It's almost frightening that hams would consider the claims for this thing to be valid. Not that I expect hams to be competent in every scientific discipline, but there are some basic fundamentals applicable to how the universe operates...- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The question is not what he is striving for is a valid quest. The question is should the press or media decide on it's validity and possibly consider the censoring of the story. Some people on this newsgroup are angry because the story has been given publicity that they feel is undeserved and harmfull to the minds of some readers. They want to squash the idea by ridicule or censorship since in their judgement it propulgates falsities about science. If the minority in science who wish to decide what is and what is not harmfull or fruitfull to the community then the study of science itself is not required and neither is debate. Art |
#9
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Jim Higgins wrote:
... This invention will never withstand strict scientific review because it will be trivial to demonstrate that it doesn't produce more power than is input in the form of RF. No net excess power produced means no new power source. ... At no time did I ever think it was over unity. The law of conservation of energy is just another law awaiting to be "broken", i.e. a new "law" found which acts to the contrary ... after experiencing the insanity of quantum physics, it leaves ones belief system shattered! The real exciting part, if true, is it can be utilized to greatly lessen our dependence on fossil fuels, remove the necessity of storage batteries (a storage tank for gas has a much greater life expectancy and is magnitudes cheaper in the long run than batteries, plus, the gas can be transported with NO loss, electricity can't) and can be used in conjunction with off peak usage of power to store energy. (and, especially wind, solar, wave, geothermal, river current generation, etc.) I have often wondered why geothermal resources, such as volcanoes in Hawaii were not utilized, through electrolysis, to generate hydrogen/oxygen to remove Hawaii's dependence on oil and stop polluting paradise! At 80% efficiency, or possibly less, I would imagine the process would become economically important. With the proper use of catalysts (platinum? palladium? Manganese Dioxide? etc.) it might even be feasible to approach 90+ efficiency. (Manganese Dioxide weakens the hydrogen/oxygen bond, if in doubt--drop a bit of Manganese Dioxide in a bit of hydrogen peroxide and watch the oxygen release! And, platinum is contained in every catalytic converter on every auto) I am just giving the benefit of the doubt at this point, as (supposed) engineers, physicists and others are claiming this is new ... and, when you have John Kanzius called before congress to provide details and congressman English wanting to allot funds to its development, and is drafting such a bill, I am assuming there is at least a grain of truth in it all ... but then, it is easy to shake my belief in the charlatan congressmen we have today ... JS JS |
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FA: "RADIO, A STUDY OF FIRST PRINCIPLES" 1928 E.E.BURNS-NR | Equipment | |||
FA: "RADIO, A STUDY OF FIRST PRINCIPLES" 1928 E.E.BURNS-NR | Equipment | |||
FA: "RADIO, A STUDY OF FIRST PRINCIPLES" 1928 E.E.BURNS-NR | Equipment | |||
WA3MOJ crahses and Burns!!! | CB |