Thank you for your information and comments. If we knew how Stan could make so much hydrogen in so short time, the whole problem would have been solved, right??
I wold really like to know if anybody in ionizationx here have made any fuel cells (Hydrogen generators) that will produce a good amount of Hydrogen. I have only made a few different ones with 316 st.steel plates. My experience from them is that more plates don't make more hydrogen with the same amperage. I also find out that with 1/8" plates I get more production than with thin .0030 plates. So my best one now have a mix of thin and thick plates. It take some time to make all of this, so I would appreciate to hear from somebody that have made some different experiments. I have not yet made any dry cells that seem to be popular on the internet, and I have not tried to make the kind that Stan Meier made with tubing. I don't know if it make much different? Any way the one in Stan's video will take a lot of space.
Bjorn
Hi Bjorn,
I am just like you on this matter.
To shorten your learning experience, I'll tell you my experience and hope we can learn from each other.
Study the structure of water of water first. It would make your experiments less costly. i made a mistake in skipping this and went directly to hydrogen.
As I said in another post, flat plates are inefficient. Learn from nature.
There are a lot of information in the internet which are very valuable and applicable to your experiments and people treat them as non-essential. The technology for water dissociation is already here, it's only a matter of time.
You'll see a lot of video from people making good gas production but they normally don't tell you that they use electrolytes. Look, plants produce hydrogen without electrolyte, that's what I understand from photolysis.