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A Research Organization
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We explain some of the unique properties of Brown's Gas such as it's cold implosive flame. And show you how to build an experimental Brown's Gas electrolyzer at home, with some low cost parts. Then, with only water and electricity, you can make Brown's Gas! Read Brown's Gas Book One before you read Brown's Gas Book Two.Brown's Gas Book Two contains comprehensive details on how to build a large or small, high quality, experimental electrolyzer that will exceed the performance of ANY known commercial electrolyzer. For example, you can build an electrolyzer that will put out 3,000 Liters per hour. |
MYTH: Brown's Gas to pump water in over-unity fashion. In fact, the energy storage by pumping water using the pressure and vacuum created by Brown's Gas is severely under-unity. You need to convert the figures you have into a common language to understand the proper relationship ( I choose joules or watt-seconds). These people are saying that it takes four watts-seconds (four joules) to make a liter of Brown's Gas; in fact Yull Brown's electrolyzers take over four watt-HOURS (14,400 joules) per liter of Brown's Gas. I do know that anyone building an engine based on These People's figures is doomed to failure. I base this opinion on actual experimentation, to back up these calculations. I refer you back to my Wattage Efficiency calculations, my mention of joules and my careful explanation of meaningful factors by using common TIME for all factors in my "Brown's Gas, Book 2'. What these People have done is measure a Time of only one second for the cycle of the "implosion" machine versus the Time of one hour to generate the gas to do that one second's work. To lift a liter of water ten meters in one second requires 98 joules of power, and this is what you can expect if you drop a liter of water 10 meters in one second. To make enough Brown's Gas to raise the liter of water by the implosion method would require 14400 joules of power, and that doesn't consider the inefficiencies involved, that's just the energy required to make a liter of Brown's Gas to either displace the water (and push it up) or implode above the water and have vacuum pull the water up. In fact, because of the elastic nature of gasses under pressure and vacuum, considerably more Brown's Gas than one liter would have to be produced. MYTH: Atmospheric 'over-unity' engine. It takes over ten times the electricity to run the "atmospheric engine" (just to run it without getting ANY power out) than if you'd simply ran an electric motor without worrying about Brown's Gas (and getting full power out). MYTH: Implosion propulsion of boats. Again, I point out the huge amount of energy required to generate the Brown's Gas, compared to the little amount of mechanical energy you get from the water being expelled. You'd go MUCH farther on your batteries if you simply used an electric motor, converting potential electricity directly into mechanical energy. |
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