hydrogen cold fusion plasma electrolysis Reactor CFR

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  • Опубликовано: 15 сен 2024
  • the shop, michael raines doing it again
    step by step CFR hydrogen cold fuseion electrolysis, Zero point alternative energy
    fuel cell

Комментарии • 485

  • @CRJEEA
    @CRJEEA 12 лет назад +6

    You want to know the trick to getting this wo work... Resonance, like toughs ultrasonic cleaners. It makes the bubbles compress as they are burnt. It's how you get the pressure you need. To stabilise it you use a set of secondary frequencies to sweep the edges near the terminals.

  • @rdc121674
    @rdc121674 10 лет назад +42

    Cold fusion involves a palladium cathode and 4 platinum coils acting as diodes. This appears to be high voltage electrolysis which will give you Hydrogen and Oxygen. Cold fusion also uses heavy water or deuterium in a lithium solution which is fused into Helium 4 creating the excess heat that it is famous for. The only other way known to fuse deuterium into Helium 4 is by standard fusion. Look up the Ivy Mike nuclear test for a clear example.

    • @jacksonripholmes3236
      @jacksonripholmes3236 2 года назад +1

      THANK YOU FOR EDUCATING ME.

    • @ashyslashy5818
      @ashyslashy5818 2 года назад +2

      NOPE

    • @PepeLePhrogg
      @PepeLePhrogg Год назад +1

      You are now about to witness the strength of street knowledge…
      Makes nuke*

    • @alexwatson6370
      @alexwatson6370 Год назад

      Cold fusion doesn't involve anything except nuclear fusion and the quality of being "cold" which isn't well-defined.

    • @zzz5824
      @zzz5824 Год назад

      You can always.. just copy what fusion does
      Ignite uranium.. then ignite hydrogen.. then ignite helium..
      Potentially igniting all air in earth at once..
      Dont do it

  • @BelieveNot
    @BelieveNot 17 лет назад +5

    This experiment definately employs what we already know about separating hydrogen from water. The fact that the hydrogen burns and creates water vapor can explain the rising temperatures. This doesn't necessarily express fusion unless Helium or deuterium is being produced.

  • @FarrahDay13
    @FarrahDay13 10 лет назад +3

    Always makes me smile when I see someone creating an underwater arc and calling it cold fusion, lol! What exactly do you think is fusing here... and what new element do you suggest is being created? I think you need to reread a few science books!

  • @Natmaras
    @Natmaras 10 лет назад +1

    "Before and after" is the name of the picture I dedicated to your very good invention and great research about the cold fusion. Have a very good one. Best greetings to you from France. Natmara

  • @DanKon75
    @DanKon75 8 лет назад +24

    Energy in is exactly the same energy out. This is not fusion, its electrolysis!!

    • @Jimmeh_B
      @Jimmeh_B 8 лет назад +8

      less like electrolysis and more like the most expensive and inefficient kettle ever.

    • @magtu96
      @magtu96 4 года назад +1

      this is plasma electrolysis.

    • @noahpedro7239
      @noahpedro7239 4 года назад

      Fuck you

    • @hantrio4327
      @hantrio4327 2 года назад

      I wouldn't even call it electrolysis because it is AC.

    • @djhorizion6670
      @djhorizion6670 6 месяцев назад

      Could I use this set up in replacement of hydrogen electrolysis in a automotive engine, or maybe even diesel? I’ve been trying to find a way to produce a reliable, and maybe even more powerful way to use hydrogen in replacement of gas and/or additional to it.

  • @morningstarsci
    @morningstarsci 2 года назад +2

    Came back to this video after 2 years. I love how he stresses the importance of using distilled water, and then proceeds to add potassium hydroxide. 🤣

  • @Danster82
    @Danster82 15 лет назад +3

    This is amazing cant wait till cold fusion is out there giving the world free energy.

  • @waterfuel
    @waterfuel 2 года назад +1

    John Keely, of his 1800's workshop in Philadelphia, had tech notes published, and a portion of his frequencies section would be beneficial for controlling Cold Fusion testing of deuterium. "The Snell Manuscript"- which is summary of 3 Keely's lab note books. One amazing test was frequencies applied for condensation of ambient air in sealed brass globe with various levels of vacuum formed on open bath mercury manometer vacuum gauge, without cooling, suction pump, or chemical ablation. He said he had control of the forces of nature. Tesla didn't like him because Keely got more of investors' money than he did.

  • @vishva8kumara
    @vishva8kumara 9 лет назад +11

    Sorry to say, this is not cold fusion. You have come quite close.
    But would need to try harder and would need to procure some rare material..
    Like heavy water and a palladium electrode.
    So I would say, don't give up. Try harder..

  • @dizzo95
    @dizzo95 16 лет назад +1

    over 50 experiments conducted by SRI International showed excess power well above the accuracy of measurement. Arata and Zhang said they observed excess heat power averaging 80 watts (1.8 times input energy) over 12 days. The researchers also said that the amount of energy reported in some of the experiments appeared to be too great compared to the small mass of the material in the cell for it to be stored by any chemical process

  • @GBS1043
    @GBS1043 16 лет назад +1

    About the only redeeming thing that I can see from your demonstration is that you were clever enough to use ceramic fuse jackets for insulators.

  • @bardrick4220
    @bardrick4220 8 лет назад +7

    This looks cool, but this is not the design of the "cold fusion" reactor. The "cold fusion" reactor is a battery that uses palladium electrodes to compress deuterium ions into the metal.
    Call it an underwater arc reactor.
    Also if you arn't detecting neutrons, there is no fusion! Buy a neutron detector!

  • @paz069
    @paz069 6 лет назад +1

    This cold fusion is very hot. I didn't know that underwater welding is actually cold fusion. Who knew...

  • @onehitpick9758
    @onehitpick9758 5 лет назад +2

    I used to do tons of electrolysis experiments at super-high voltages and currents. They are so fun. You can create all kinds of cool by-products, plate things, and make separable hydrogen and oxygen in large quantities. I never achieved fusion, so congrats (-: To really achieve fusion in a setup as simple as this, you need a vacuum chamber to allow mean free path for acceleration, and heavy isotope ions that can be accelerated off the cathode onto an appropriate anode target.

  • @ApostleRon
    @ApostleRon 16 лет назад +2

    I did enjoy the video though I wish you had explained what our goal was in detail. You did a great job with what you did though but pls. consider us that know nothing of this process the next time you make a video and I am looking forward to another. I always thought cold fusion was the stacking up of certain molocules in a cold envirement untill the molecules reach a point of reaction not useing heat at all. But thats just me I guess. Thanks. ApostleRon ( I know my spelling is bad)

  • @cunning4nik8er
    @cunning4nik8er 8 лет назад +17

    Fusion? If you're trying to fuse misinformation and a single digit IQ, mission accomplished

  • @PhoenixTalon
    @PhoenixTalon 16 лет назад +1

    I'm with Trigwizard03 on this one. I could care less if this is fusion or not. What I want to know is how much energy is required to sustain the reaction, and how much reusable energy is being produced. Because, if this device cannot be used as a source of energy, then it is just a really cool water heater.

  • @MrOmegacutz
    @MrOmegacutz 14 лет назад +1

    Truly special :) 2H2O -> 2H2 + O2
    If you produced He, then I am sold.

  • @FarceTheory
    @FarceTheory 10 лет назад +7

    This video is great when it comes to separating Oxygen and Hydrogen and then putting it back together. But for Fusion to accrue, You have to end up with a denser Element that is greater than all that is exposed in the experiment. He makes no attempt at searching for this element and I find the text misleading.

    • @apoc7468
      @apoc7468 6 лет назад +4

      lol, he "fused" oxygen and hydrogen into water.

  • @waterfuel
    @waterfuel Год назад

    John Keely machine shop work during late 1800's was able to control some forces of nature with resonance vibrations. He used arrays of tuning forks hooked to what we now call thermocouples and thermopiles of silver, gold and platinum wires. Inharmonics of certain RATIOS applied would cause molecular and atomic attraction. He could even cause same poles of magnets to attract. several books available. Keely And His Discoveries, + Free Energy Pioneer + The Snell Manuscript - which is a tech summary of Keely's 3 reports printed about 1892.

  • @tommorris3688
    @tommorris3688 3 года назад +1

    Current fluctuations caused by bubbles formed at the electrode. Thank you for your demonstration of plasma electrolysis.

  • @MadMetalShop
    @MadMetalShop 8 лет назад +4

    cannot stress safety enough.......puts on open frame glasses 😄😄😄👍

  • @ostsweinen5240
    @ostsweinen5240 9 лет назад

    This guy in the livingroom with that contraption, a bowl of chips and speed king on full blast. That's how you greet a new year.

  • @esra_erimez
    @esra_erimez 2 года назад

    Using this technique I was able to successfully replace ConEd for all of Manhattan's power needs from my kitchen. I just put all the electricity into the outlet

  • @craxd1
    @craxd1 10 лет назад +5

    It only took listening to the description to know this is not Cold Fusion, and far from it. They use Lithium as the electrolyte, and heavy water, not distilled water, and the cathode is either Palladium, or some have had success with Nickel. Just burning Hydrogen, is not Cold Fusion, and nowhere near it. The excess heat, generated by Cold Fusion, is from the reaction within the cathode itself, where the process forms Helium, and some have found Tritium. In this, it is fusion, they think, that creates these new elements. Folks, go to a reputable website, or video to learn what it is, there are several good university lectures on it. This is nothing more than an electric arc electrolysis.

  • @kevinjackson4464
    @kevinjackson4464 7 лет назад +3

    Michael Raines surviving the radiation of fusion is far more scientifically interesting than cold fusion.

    • @holywdtughguy
      @holywdtughguy  7 лет назад +1

      Yea didn't think of that until my thermometer went out!!!

  • @LaserGadgets
    @LaserGadgets 16 лет назад +4

    It was just a normal comment.
    He can't proof its real cold fusion. Looks to me like browns gas...guess if there would be the He you described, it would as bright as the sun. ;-)

  • @mishkathellere4417
    @mishkathellere4417 9 лет назад +7

    So what were the neutron radiation levels?

  • @shiba72
    @shiba72 16 лет назад

    I did That Variac can be directly connected to a bridge diodes and capacitor assembly to produce dc just use a circuit breaker 20 amps will do fine. You can buy it At your local electronic stores and spare parts

  • @acorgiwithacrown467
    @acorgiwithacrown467 6 лет назад

    M8 All you've built is a small bomb. the device itself is just high voltage electrolysis which is creating oxygen and hydrogen, This oxygen/hydrogen mixture is then being compressed in the tube essentially forming a bomb that would off with an open source of ignition. Also that steam isn't steam, its the oxygen and hydrogen forming back into water.

  • @zm177
    @zm177 16 лет назад

    He said he wasn't trying to prove that more energy is being produced than is being put in. He was just showing that fusion is possible. Sadly thats a huge problem with fusion, we need to produce a huge reactor to get a net increase of energy output.

  • @Etimespace
    @Etimespace 16 лет назад

    Good. Now you see how cold fusion works
    Bernoulli Effect - Science Theater 17
    Those two cans get closer when air flows between them simulates how two protons are joined together. So then we have a helium-atom with cold fusion.

  • @beberox101
    @beberox101 16 лет назад

    yes!!!!!!!!! I 100% AGREE WITH YOU, what is the imput watts, and energy produced, and can we harness the energy produced!

  • @glotoniok
    @glotoniok 14 лет назад

    okay,nice
    keep up the hard work,,to find better,,,solution,,,very low ampere,,with more quantity of hydrogen is best...bravo
    glotoniok science

  • @stdavross666
    @stdavross666 14 лет назад +1

    Im just waiting for the whole thing to go bang and catch fire

  • @tillyreynders6188
    @tillyreynders6188 8 месяцев назад

    This is the Pons and Fleischman setup. Without palladium... i believe 1982
    It is actually not cold fusion. The reaction that takes place however is very efficient and can be used as heating.
    As you push current trough the rod into the water, the rod heats up.
    At a DC voltage of about 250 to 300 volts DC you get a real good reaction.
    What happens???
    As the Rod is heated by the initial current flowing through it, the contact point with the water turns the water into steam.
    The water is conductive, but the steam is not. This is the essential and vital point to remember.
    Because the tip of the rod is now covered in steam and not water, there is no electrical conduction between the rod and the water.
    Just like when you close a light switch, you can see the sparc. Especially with DC this sparc is prevalent.
    So the voltage wants to jump the gap between the rod, the steam and the water. Because there is a high voltage, the sparc can jump this gap.
    However, because the steam is virtually non conductive the current drawn, drops significantly.
    The sparc however is very very hot as it is actually plasma, which is about 3000 degree celcius. Hot enough to melt metal, as you can see happening in a welding device. This ensures the rod stays hot enough, to keep the water touching the rod, instantly boiling and thus creating the insulating steam barrier.
    So with this setup you can easily create tremendous temperatures that heat up the water, creating steam while drawing far less current then a normal water heater does.If you were to raise the voltage to say, 500 volt DC the reaction would be far more efficient still. The water wouldn't have to be so conductive and the initial current draw would be much lower. Hence an even more efficient system. Instead of using sodium hydroxide or any kind of hydroxide, the non poisonous sodium bi carbonate will do the trick to.
    Stay safe and pass on the knowledge, by courtesy of EmC4U2 (youtuber)

  • @keeganmaloney3440
    @keeganmaloney3440 10 лет назад +24

    this is just high energy electrolysis... How would one claim that this is fusion? you would need a concentration of deuterium or tritium for starters...

  • @adrianoldchannel2494
    @adrianoldchannel2494 5 лет назад +1

    Very interesting. I didn't know that could be possible.

  • @klorat666
    @klorat666 15 лет назад

    This is water vapor bubbles created by the electrical heat (arc) that then implode. The sound you can hear is called cavitation - not fusion...
    The exact same thing happens when you weld under water, and it is all just an electrical water heater.

  • @pope1856
    @pope1856 14 лет назад

    Pretty fancy under water welder. Cool looking, but not fusion. You need to try to focus a dueterium gas stream with a focused tritium gas stream and add say 100 million electron volts. Then you'd be cooking with fusion. Good luck Mr. Wizard.

  • @dugaiczyk
    @dugaiczyk 13 лет назад

    wow that guy should get the Nobel Prize. He's a genius.

  • @Severn32
    @Severn32 14 лет назад

    I think you are own to something here. You have given me some ideas. I realy beleive that you are very close to something here!!!!

  • @KNGKIDZ09
    @KNGKIDZ09 10 лет назад +3

    this is some high tech boiler machine, right?

  • @gingy717
    @gingy717 17 лет назад

    Chrispcrunchy is right
    The only way to confirm fusion is to ensure the presence of helium. However both helium and hydrogen are lighter then air and the presence of hydrogen means its not fusion. To confirm fusion light the bag on fire. Hydrogen is combustible and helium is not so if the bag ignites fusion is not occurring. The only problem with this idea is if hydrogen is present burning the bag is dangerous. The solution is to inhale the contents then talk to see if your voice goes squeaky

  • @akerone89
    @akerone89 13 лет назад

    Please correct me if I'm wrong but, I think what this does is just breaking water into Hydrogen and Oxygen and then applying more energy to form water again. That's basically what a Hydrogen motor does, doesn't it? Fusion would be to turn that Hydrogen into Helium.
    Also, I doubt this kind of reaction is energy efficient.
    Cold fusion or not, it is still kind of beautiful.

  • @Etimespace
    @Etimespace 16 лет назад

    A sound (=a certain pressure wave) is conducted to that substance and according to my theory this sound cleans the
    energywaves opening up at that that moment from two different hydrogen atomcores with the sound. After that these two cores of hydrogen atom don´t push themselves away from each other at the same relation as they expand.The other atoms around them continue to expand and push this way these two hydrogen atomcores close to each other with the energywaves that open up from themselves

  • @jakep519
    @jakep519 11 лет назад

    It is sort of fusion, technically it's fusing atoms but it's not what takes place in the sun. That would be thermonuclear fusion, which is millions of degrees. I would say it has the potential to power many things.

  • @richardstromquist1
    @richardstromquist1 10 лет назад +9

    Hahaha the funniest part is that he probably actually believes that fusion is taking place

  • @JackRidesBikes
    @JackRidesBikes 16 лет назад +1

    Interesting stuff, Can't think of an intelligent comment

  • @JenMichel100
    @JenMichel100 12 лет назад

    YOUR THE ONE WHO DEFINE THE RULES OF THE UNIVERSE
    REMEMBER MANY THEORIES ABOUT THE UNIVERSE WAS ACCEPTED BY PHYSICS BEFORE AND THEN WAS DISCOVERED WRONG

  • @FreePizza007
    @FreePizza007 13 лет назад

    while I undertsnad what your intentions are. Cold fusion tests require a number of things to vrify that cold fusion is taking place. Have you confirmed the fusion of atoms, creation of elements on the anode, reliably measured input watts against output watts. It is possible to make plasma arcs in air and warm the air up. But that does not conclusivly prove cold fusion. I hope you undertand where I am comming from. Thanks.

  • @hhoschool
    @hhoschool 3 года назад +1

    Hello
    i have some questions i hope you answer me
    What kind of rods ?
    and how many it thickness ?
    are you give AC or DC electric?
    Is the rods rust or nothing happen to rods

  • @arvis123321
    @arvis123321 14 лет назад +1

    isnt heare iust a reaction, when 2H2O + 2KOH -> 2KOOH + 2H2, then H2 + O -> H2O + heat..? shouldnt you use pollonium or smth for cold fusion stuff? isnt fusion smth like 2H -> He + energy . . ? i mean you have to get new elements out of raw ones? or what is made heare really is a fusion?

  • @NoahXBloodyXNoah
    @NoahXBloodyXNoah 17 лет назад

    Cool kettle but its not cold fusion. I've built similar things & to make it work you need A/C. If you use A/C you find the temperature tries to climb to 10000 degrees resulting in ruined test gear, but a successful experiment. As is, your arc is separating the hydrogen from the oxygen then igniting them but without net gain in energy released. I don't know why A/C works so well and D/C just separate but you find it does, so try it.

  • @OsamabinLadenisGAY
    @OsamabinLadenisGAY 17 лет назад

    That is amazing the way arcing electric currents under water is going to save us.......But, from what? How?

  • @T0m0zuki
    @T0m0zuki 17 лет назад

    Of course not. You can compare tea heating (with gas) to coal power plants or nuclear power plants. Cold fusion reaction needs a lot of electric current to work. The reason, why those power plants doesn`t operate is in (in)effectivness. In other words; you produce the same amount of energy that is needed for maintaining the reaction.

  • @Tibobhe
    @Tibobhe 14 лет назад

    This guy is on a tv show called the colony!
    Is plays on discovery chanel every wendnesday at 8:00 pm eastern(canada)!

  • @HEMPPUBLISHINGCOM
    @HEMPPUBLISHINGCOM 9 лет назад +5

    Are you using AC current???? Thanks

  • @pyonchan1804
    @pyonchan1804 16 лет назад +1

    How energy was put in, and how much came out?

  • @surkewrasoul4711
    @surkewrasoul4711 2 года назад

    And Those who Blaspheme and says that Our Lord Didnt walk over water shall be condemned into the Forest with nothing. Amen Borther , Lord has spoken to you today. 😇

  • @Dawnbandit1
    @Dawnbandit1 9 лет назад

    It's the dude from the Colony!

  • @viciokas1993
    @viciokas1993 14 лет назад +1

    Oh man! You looked a bit less smart on "The Colony"! I could never think up something like that LOL... Nice job there

  • @ic7481
    @ic7481 4 месяца назад

    This is the type of guy that sold Uranium tablets for "health" 100 years ago

  • @ChrisPCrunchy
    @ChrisPCrunchy 17 лет назад

    At first I couldnt see the point but now I get the idea. It uses both the electric current and the energy traped as hydrogen and oxygen to heat the water. How does this compare with total power used heating with a conventional electric element? Can you replicate this without boosting the hydrogen level in the water by adding the drain cleaner? Heating water using electric current is so inefficient anyway I wonder where you could use this.

  • @nonyabeeznuss304
    @nonyabeeznuss304 9 лет назад +15

    The description for this video reads like a highschooler tossed a bunch of random tech jargon together. Like if I made a video of a car motor and called it a "diesel hydro dynamic compressed combustion gas low emission pulse driven power plant"
    Sounds cool. Doest mean shit. Im pretty sure thats just plasma electrolysis. Or just a high voltage arc inside a fancy jar.

  • @jacoblantigua1366
    @jacoblantigua1366 5 лет назад

    I suggest using a geiger counter to detect if fusion is occurring

  • @TakodaTribe
    @TakodaTribe 16 лет назад

    Sorry man, don't know if this was for me or not but what i was asking was if he found traces of helium4 which would be an indication of a nuclear reaction i.e coldfusion. If not and there is no excess heat all that's happening here is electrolysis resulting in HHO gas which in turn would only be beneficial if it were to produce more energy than it took to extract the Hydrogen. get me?

  • @cronfarmer
    @cronfarmer 16 лет назад

    Not regarding the cold fusion, but i noticed at 2:52 there is a fast moving object witch seems to be yellow..This object has to moving very quickly cause it looks like Its only can be seen for a second in a few frames....Take a look

  • @obionedogan
    @obionedogan 14 лет назад

    @DerCrossi You are right, my statement about the process emiting no radiation is wrong. The thing is that radioactive waste from nuclear fusion remains radioactive for 50 to 70 years compared to the thousands of years radioactivity of nuclear fission residue. I would edit my post and correct it but there is no option for editing :)

  • @fergus247
    @fergus247 16 лет назад

    Cold Fusion rocks
    But how much energy is needed to create/extract the materials used... you need to look at it in a broader perspective.

  • @marleythe9
    @marleythe9 16 лет назад +1

    whole point of cold fusion is that it purdices high as hell tempature crazy energy and is 100% clean.

  • @ChrisPCrunchy
    @ChrisPCrunchy 17 лет назад

    Drain off the water keeping the the bag opening at the bottom so none of the lighter than air gasses can escape. See if the bag floats (Is lighter than air.) then try and burn the contents of bag to confirm it is not hydrogen (also lighter than air.)

  • @romiller7291
    @romiller7291 8 лет назад

    eels are the perfect form of cold fusion

  • @dougchatch
    @dougchatch 4 года назад +1

    President Trump's next secretary of energy.

  • @martinfyhn1976
    @martinfyhn1976 2 года назад

    Surely this is nothing but plasma and electrolysis, and potentially igniting the mixture of oxygen, and hydrogen, if they manage to mix. Fire, being a plasma, would also provide a low resistance path for the electricity, in addition to the plasma arcs formed by the voltage. And every time the current jumps, is because of a plasma discharge.
    If he actually reliably ignited all the hydrogen produced here, then all the losses and effects are 100% heat, so he'd have a heater that's 100% efficient, much like an electrical radiator. I'd prefer the radiator though, because it's less noisy, and less likely to kill anyone.

  • @jbignes5
    @jbignes5 12 лет назад +1

    Yes there is. Hydrogen in it's natural form after being made is H2. After the electrodes arc it splits the H2 into H + H which then recombines into H2 and releases a ton more heat energy then it took to separate the hydrogen in the first place. So we have splitting the H2 into separate H's then let it recombine into H2 and gain more heat out of the process. Although there isn't a new atom there is the atomic hydrogen recombining into hydrogen molecule.

  • @Severn32
    @Severn32 14 лет назад

    I think you are own to something here. You have given me some ideas.

  • @blizzard242
    @blizzard242 16 лет назад

    Here is just my little tip to all these people, take a basic chemistry class before posting your video. If you can just explain the reaction; what turns into what? I will at lease watch more than 10sec of your video.

  • @Etimespace
    @Etimespace 16 лет назад

    Cold fusion
    Apparently nowadays most of the people in science societies don´t presume that the so called cold fusion could be possible. According to my theory it however is possible. As a matter of fact it is a relevant part of the
    principles of the universe.
    As I understand, observations of cold fusion can be observed in a certain substance, that has hydrogen atoms.

  • @freethisone
    @freethisone 13 лет назад

    very nice, i would think it was similar to how a star is born. the RF noise can go way up causing the gas to become conductive. here you hit it with enough volts, and low amps. now think how can a gas be heated up in the same manner as the water was slowly, but with high frequency RF in the 22ooo kHz or even microwave frequency. like on the sun..

  • @protogenius
    @protogenius 15 лет назад

    Hey you can get peladium out of a catilitic converter, then you can replicate thing's even better, just run your lead to the peladium dipped end of the converter material, then use that for your spark gap. I'm pretty sure that will work.

  • @bubbie780
    @bubbie780 15 лет назад

    hey you are on the show the colony ur great

  • @karlknudson4991
    @karlknudson4991 10 лет назад

    YA KOOL ,THOUGHT YOU SAID COLD FUSION ,LOOKING AT THE THERMOMETER IT IS WARM ,SO WARM FUSION? NOW IF YOU SHUT OFF THE INPUT JUICE WILL IT CONTINUE TO REACT AND PRODUCE ELECTRICITY @220 VOLTS?

  • @obionedogan
    @obionedogan 14 лет назад

    This here is hydrogen burning - nothing to do with nuclear fussion.Fusing hydrogen into helium usually happens in the core of a star where the pressure and heat are unimaginable and that's why cold fusion is considered impossible.However if someone actually figures out how to create cold fusion he will instantly become the richest person in the history of the world, for cold fusion is an infinite energy source and(unlike nuclear fission) emits absolutely no radiation which makes it totaly clean.

  • @TheLangfords
    @TheLangfords 16 лет назад

    Looks very cool. Sounds very cool.
    But it's not fusion, cold or otherwise. Not unless you're generating Helium.
    All you're doing is cracking water into Hydrogen and Oxygen and then using an arc to ignite them and burn it back to (hot) water.

  • @ChrisPCrunchy
    @ChrisPCrunchy 17 лет назад

    Can you repeat this experiment and test for helium. Seeing as helium is non flamable it would not be comsumed in the combustion of the hydrogen. To test for it you would only have to place a bag made of light plastic over to top of the unit to catch gasses given off. Seal the bag and let the gasses cool so the water vapour can condense.

  • @nesbionics
    @nesbionics 6 лет назад

    En mi humilde opinión , se genera hidrógeno pero este hace ignición , debido a los atomos de oxigeno y esto calienta el agua , con lo cual lo que sale por encima es vapor de agua , el agua no alcanzara mas de 100ºc, pero lo que se esta obteniendo es vapor agua junto con alguna molecula de oh , pero este método no me parece que sirva , y no es fusion en frio. Saludos!!

  • @the_oni_desdenova
    @the_oni_desdenova 9 лет назад +7

    thats no cold fusion its a good idear but cold fusion is the fusion of 2 hydrogen atoms to one helium at low tempereture

    • @shawnkearney2542
      @shawnkearney2542 9 лет назад +1

      sean kirschner he does not seem to know what the word "array" means, no whu would you expect him to now what "fusion" means?

    • @ekleko1
      @ekleko1 7 лет назад

      Thats what happens in hot fusion. 2 Hydrogen are forced to fuse and break the Coulomb barrier. In LENR, low energy Nuclear Reactions, The Hydrogen gains Neutrons, up to 4, once it hits 4 neutrons, it "decays" into Helium, i guess. And the "decay" part is Beta-decay

  • @ThatHVguyYash
    @ThatHVguyYash 4 года назад

    Congratulations

  • @robertironside290
    @robertironside290 8 лет назад

    Don't need the drain cleaner poop. Salt water and the distance into the water of the cathode and diode make a BIG difference.

  • @bairfamilyfarm1336
    @bairfamilyfarm1336 6 лет назад

    I'm not getting it's use. Using electrolysis to separate hydrogen and oxygen, then igniting it with a plasma arc. Producing steam. But... What's it's use?

  • @dukeofhazard
    @dukeofhazard 13 лет назад

    @FatLingon The mysterious 'white powder' is Potassium Hydroxide.

  • @josephgreen2008
    @josephgreen2008 12 лет назад

    What about the math.Is there potential for more energy out than the energy put in?If so enough to make it viable?
    Good luck liked the experiment

  • @noblefuse-suleimansamiazar
    @noblefuse-suleimansamiazar 12 лет назад

    we spoke five years ago after i posted proper method for fusion and heavy water via my ideology of high voltage frequency considerations,not electrode catalytic method. five years now world going nuke soon over energy needs.awesome.noblefuse

  • @lucasnelson08
    @lucasnelson08 15 лет назад

    a geiger counter and a way of measuring helium output would add some validity to this experiment

  • @romiller7291
    @romiller7291 8 лет назад

    electric eels perform cold fusion within the waters giving you an exciting experience but they perform cold fusion within the cells of their body

  • @doloresseagrave-peel2638
    @doloresseagrave-peel2638 Год назад

    Awesome thanks

  • @wallypizza323
    @wallypizza323 2 года назад

    This dude was on 'The Colony'. Thought he looked familiar.

  • @oscaragp
    @oscaragp 15 лет назад

    beautiful