You know guys one thing i have being think about...
how could we use multiphase to create a sort of low voltage coil winding to have something like dc on it without the need of diodes...
the electrodes shape should somehow perhaps help the ac to get filtered while keep a dc flow..
but what kind of device could create this low voltage high current dc current?
i have being thinking about it and perhaps is what we miss... activating the molecules with the high voltage seems to be only half the story to me...
Dc is required to complete the reactions on the electrodes so far as i concluded.. i think the key wold be to have a source of 500mv with high amperage would be enough if mix up with the ac to do the job...
how to generate dc with no diodes ?
i know how it can be done with mosfets but is a bit expensive to do...
i think we are missing something...
basically what i see is that when the molecules is broken from the ac field every increasing under resonance.. when the molecules are not able to discharge with their counter pair they simply move back and reform water molecule...
if we could isolate capacitively the cell we could verify that... high dielectric ceramics container would be a much to test with... but my guess is that meyer tried to make this isolation with resistors and inductors to block the flow of current to negligible amounts instead of using ceramics....
a resistor will create an isolation depending of course on the concept of isolation used.. the current flowing will create a potential gradient..
so maybe using a couple of them and different circuitry we could do some injury to water stability.
Hi Fabio,
There are a number of ways to accomplish the rectification you're suggesting. A mechanical system known as a synchronous rectifier spins a shaft at just the right speed so that input brushes always contact appropriate output sector electrodes during the time the brushes have the desired polarity.
Nicola Tesla and Ed Gray both used batteries to impart a DC offset to an applied signal. As long as there are enough batteries in series to bring the low point of the signal up to zero volts or higher, the signal will then be rectified.
As you suspect, a voltage gradient can have utility for producing a DC offset. I've shown that concentric rings, with differing potentials, will produce an offset when positioned adjacent to a thin sheet of resistive charcoal. And the mineral Tourmaline has a natural gradient, due to the types of atoms ordered along the length of its crystalline molecules.
A metal triangle intended for use as a rectifier may have to incorporate a slight bow. With my shape resonance circuit, a small tapered alligator clip blocks reverse multiphasic current, but a flat metal triangle doesn't. E. Whittaker is famous for showing that a static charge can be decomposed into a set of bidirectional waves, with at least one wave including a harmonic. When a positive charge is momentarily applied to a properly shaped electrode (which doesn't have to metal), multiphasic energy can then flow in only one direction along the electrode - away from the point, but never towards the point. This allows charge to self organize on the electrode (hopefully, at least as fast as it drains off through the water), if the electrode is thereafter connected only at its point. And I've found that batteries having concentric electrodes can also exhibit the charge organising effect, making these batteries suitable for producing a milliamp offset without being discharged.
If you want to produce a heavy Low Voltage current, combine some regular LV current with some entraining unidirectional HV potential, then run it through a step down transformer. No rectifier needed. (Since you asked, I'll look up the patent number).
And I do agree with your thoughts about ceramics. There's a good chance Stan's injector had a ceramic insulated, positive inner electrode, with the gas and mist directly contacting the negative outer electrode.