![]() | This is the method used by commercial HHO welders that use series cell design. This cell was designed to run on 120 volts using baking soda (4 volts per cell). I will switch to lye, but I have to cut another 31 plates. This project is the reason I made a plasma cutter. These type of designs are very efficient and produce very little heat. Each cell is isolated from every other cell. This makes it a pain to fill, but makes for great efficiency. A wider plate spacing lets the gas out and 3/8 inch is found to be the most efficient (liters per hour per watt hour).
UPDATE:
When All was said and done the silicone leaked. I pulled it off and used a thick rubber seal between the pipe and the end plate. This seals completely. I cut the rubber ring from 2 more of those rubber pipe ends.
This cell was intended to run in a car using a 110 volt inverter. Using an 80 uF capacitor in line with the ac limits current to 4 amps. This prevents thermal run away and is super simple. Inverters are common and cheap now; they are also efficient. Auteur: Cheaphardwarez Tags: browns cell gas HHO Series Ajoutée: samedi 12 juin 1993 00:53:28 |
Ajouter cette vidéo à vos favoris
Envoyer cette vidéo à vos amis





![64 a 32 [Grupo F :] The Great Battle Tourneament 2007 KOF 2k2](http://i.ytimg.com/vi/vhwDNIDhRCE/default.jpg)









