[NewCandle] Structured running water?

Keith Nagel NewCandleAdmin at ipdiscover.com
Thu May 17 13:56:38 EDT 2007


Hi Jones,

I didn't see any information about the circuit, but I sort
of gathered from his talk that he was using those big car
batteries? If so, with a constant voltage system, what is
being measured here is the conductivity of the water. A more
conductive water produces more gas for a given voltage,
at greater efficiency. This from ohms law, and faradays
law. From the photo's, it looks like the plates are in parallel?
If so, then 10 volts overpotential is pretty bad, like
<10% efficient. Maybe you can fedex him some Red Devil?

With a constant current system, you'd look at voltage to
measure efficiency. And gas output would be the same in
all cases, unless other reactions are taking place ( "junk"
as he puts it, mainly corroded iron from the clorine ).

I hope he has better luck gas sealing plexi than I did (grin).

K.

-----Original Message-----
From: newcandle-bounces at ipdiscover.com
[mailto:newcandle-bounces at ipdiscover.com]On Behalf Of Jones Beene
Sent: Thursday, May 17, 2007 10:07 AM
To: New energy for the new world.
Subject: [NewCandle] Structured running water?


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DVL8Q7Hqt6Y&mode=related&search=

This guy John Aarons has a number of interesting tests and vids. It is 
"small science" but it could be meaningful.

This one seems to indicate that tap water will produce much more gas, if 
it has been allowed to "run" for 30 seconds or so, prior to use... 
compared to normal tap water out of the faucet.

Does this "runnning" somehow structure the molecules in a linear way, so 
that they dissociate faster ? Doesn't really make much sense.

Jones

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