If water moves too fast past the electrodes, a fuzzy grey deposit will grow on an electrode by particle collision with hydrogen bubbes forming there as water pressure sticks the bubble to the electrode. Particles get stuck on the surface tension of the bubbles and form a crust structure. That crust structure is a semiconductor that emits even more bubbles that collect more particles...and so it grows and grows into the direction of the water flow.
Being a semiconductor, that structure will also upset any calibration the generator may have.
But being grown on hydrogen bubbles that aren't all that stable without water pressure increasing surface tension, if left alone with power off, will begin to emit a white particle cloud exactly like the electrodes would have.
If you are using mechanical stirring and get a grey fluffy deposit, slow the stir rate down.
Ode
At 12:10 PM 11/29/2003 -0500, you wrote:
>>>>
Hi, Vince!<<<<
The mixing method given
by "Ole Bob" produces
by itself in steady state
in a cylindrical vessel a
pattern of flowlines that
are horizontal and
tangential. A combination
of the vertical-axial convection
of thermal stirring with the
horizontal-tangential shearing
of "Ole Bob" is has a
wonderful balance to it, or
so it would seem to me.
Thank you for carrying out
actual experimentation that
confirms it.
Best regards,
Matthew
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