Larry Forsley just uploaded the final Short Course video which is about
glow discharge reactions:
>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_4QBbgJyk7w
Thanks Jed.
On Thu, 4 Aug 2022 at 01:40, Jed Rothwell wrote:
> I do not recall an experiment that produced a lot of steam. Maybe the glow
> discharge ones? They went for 15 minutes before the electrode dissolved.
> They did produce a lot of steam.
>
>>
I do not recall an experiment that produced a lot of steam. Maybe the glow
discharge ones? They went for 15 minutes before the electrode dissolved.
They did produce a lot of steam.
>
"Clean Planet" has a boiler under development in partnership with Miura
Co.,Ltd., leading boiler manufacturer in Japan. There does not appear to be a
convincing video that I can find.
Frank Grimer wrote:
Thanks Terry but that's not it. I seem to remember a specimen, presumably
large,
Thanks Terry but that's not it.
I seem to remember a specimen, presumably large, in a bath - I had an image
of a domestic bath but presumably it was probably something smaller - and
vast quantities of steam being released over a long time period - vastly
more than could arise from a chemical reacti
On Wed, Aug 3, 2022 at 10:11 AM Frank Grimer <88.fr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I can't remember where I read that Mizuno had demonstrated a specimen in a
> water bath which generated impossible amounts of steam. Can anyone provide
> a link to that experiment please?
>
>>
>>
I don't know about "impossi
I can't remember where I read that Mizuno had demonstrated a specimen in a
water bath which generated impossible amounts of steam. Can anyone provide
a link to that experiment please?
On Tue, 2 Aug 2022 at 14:16, Jed Rothwell wrote:
> Jonathan Berry wrote:
>
> Wrist watches of course don't need
Just an idea, hear me out.
The kinetic mechanism in wrist watches is hardly tapping out the potential
for such a source of energy, the kinetic mechanism I'm sure doesn't give
the wearer any perceivable feedback from the tiny weight, therefore he
could wear 2, or 20 without much issue (at least in
In reply to Jed Rothwell's message of Tue, 2 Aug 2022 09:15:54 -0400:
Hi,
Years ago, I proposed a very simple solution to the problem of recharging
pacemaker batteries, on this list:- Use a
lossy air core transformer to recharge the battery as required. Sure it
wouldn't be efficient, but it wou
Jonathan Berry wrote:
Wrist watches of course don't need such frequent replacement, but more-over
> there are both kinetic and solar solutions.
>
That's true. There are probably some small devices similar to wrist watches
that are not moved or left in sunlight that could use a long-lived battery
Wrist watches of course don't need such frequent replacement, but more-over
there are both kinetic and solar solutions.
Solar seems to have won out because it can be charged from an intense light
source quickly and because you don't need to wear it for it to be provided
with energy.
They (at least
USD 1471.75 million
“The Global Hearing Aid Batteries Market Size was estimated at *USD 1471.75
million in 2021* and is projected to reach USD 2057.13 million by 2028,
exhibiting a CAGR of 4.90% during the forecast period. ”
On Mon, Aug 1, 2022, 8:28 AM Jed Rothwell wrote:
> Many researchers hav
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