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shotthruthemb
Member
Last Activity: 02-04-2019, 11:56 AM
Joined: 01-05-2019
Location: Toronto, BC
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  • Re: Has anyone had any sucess with HHO as a fuel source?



    H2O. Hydrogen(flammable)... Hydrogen(flammable)... Oxygen(flammable).

    If you spray a small, fine mist of water onto a very, very hot (red hot, like 2500-3000F) heating element, it will ignite. You can also spray a very hot camp fire with a small dose of water and watch it ignite.

    It's quite flammable in the right circumstances......
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  • Re: Has anyone had any sucess with HHO as a fuel source?



    This is brute force electrolysis, and by itself is not very practical unless you have some high duty electrical current to back it up. There are ways to make the water chemically separate much easier, but aside from adding baking soda(?) to your water, I have no idea what they are.

    I read there has been a lot success with resonance, using a square wave generator etc, but I don't really have a way to play with any of that and do any studying or verifying of what works and what doesn't. I'm sure...
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  • Re: Has anyone had any sucess with HHO as a fuel source?

    It seems that water, when hit with electricity (about 30-40 amps @ 12 volts, so about 480 watts or 8 watts/minute) will begin to break apart... I don't know if its from heat, or something about the electricity breaking the bonds between the H and O2. I think the ions are turned from positive to negative? This creates a bubbling effect, or a "steam" rather, of separated H and O atoms that are highly flammable.

    It's very different from just boiling water, as boiled water can't be ignited by spark. Although...
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  • Has anyone had any sucess with HHO as a fuel source?

    Supposedly electrolysis can be done at much less voltage than what is currently understood as the standard of electrolysis today - also called brute force electrolysis. I have read about Stan Meyers electrolysis device which can supposedly split the bonds on H2O by using only 1/2 a volt, and while I don't doubt that it's possible, I have no way of testing or confirming how said device works.

    Has anyone tried installing these and gotten even reasonable results? I don't mind paying for gas, but at $4 a gallon and 10 miles on only the highway and 5 in the city... Bull#%$+!! I need...
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  • Re: ASUS Q302L won't boot

    Alright! Sorry for the delay... But I got something... I couldn't find the inductor/CPUVcore on the boardview file, but when measured with a multimeter with red on the inductor and black on ground as you said, I got 1.79v at my 20v setting for the inductor near the CPU. I only measured one side... I guess I should have done both. But this was the side closest to the CPU. I retested it also with the power off and then pressed on, and got .25v for just a split second before heading to a stable 1.79v. I'm assuming this is a good working voltage for the inductor......
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  • Re: ASUS Q302L won't boot

    Who hoo! Thank you! Now I have a place to start...

    So I just want to ask.. I have a cheap multimeter from a hardware store. How do I go about testing this CPU Vcore inductor? Let's say I find a pin diagram for it or it's in boardview, will a regular multimeter do? Or do I need something like an oscilloscope?

    Do I hold one line of the multimeter to one side of the inductor, and the other to the fan screw in order to test each side of the CPU Vcore inductor? It seems there is a standard way to test these pins without worrying...
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    Last edited by shotthruthemb; 01-11-2019, 12:44 PM. Reason: I meant inductor not chip

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  • ASUS Q302L won't boot

    Hello all,

    I got a not working laptop some time ago that was given to me... The previous owner said he had dropped it while it was running and broke it. There is a very small faint dent on the outside case of the monitor where I believe it hit when he dropped it. Since then, it hasn't been functioning correctly and acts broken 95% of the time. I can't quite remember all the details as it has been a while but I'll try to recount them...

    (Please keep in mind the Windows 10 OS didn't function at all on the HDD. I think the HDD works but I never had time or tools to play...
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  • Re: Asus Q502L does not boot up properly

    I am beginning work on a faulty Q302L quad(above 1.9GHz I believe) with built in ram and I want you to know this post is very inspirational to me. Please keep at this I am learning from your processes and posts, I hope you fix this best of luck, hope to see what the problem is. I'm no expert but some thoughts came to mind... Is the power source adapter outputting correct volts? That's terribly unlikely but just a random thought. Is something sending to much power to your FETs and causing them to short the PU8100? Sounds like so many more...
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