>>Should I use BUD or MILLER and should they be empty or full. Probally
>> empty would work better. On the other hand it might be kinda hard
>> to do the wiring after drinking all of them. :}
>As an enviromentalest, I prefer Bud because the animals like it on
>tv. You may draw off equally eac
M. G. Devour wrote:
> It seems that Cisco's plans would work for anyone who was willing to
> be careful and was fully concious of the risks involved. But the
> design is rough, without safeguards.
>
> How would we fix the problems? I suppose just use 4 identical
> batteries for 36 volts, or 2 for
>>Should I use BUD or MILLER and should they be empty or full. Probally
>> empty would work better. On the other hand it might be kinda hard
>> to do the wiring after drinking all of them. :}
>>
>> Take Care
>>
>> Reid
>
>As an enviromentalest, I prefer Bud because the animals like it on
>t
Reid Smith wrote:
>
> >> DC Electricity.101 tells you that 3 batteries in series MUST be of the SAME
> >> electrical size as to voltage/amperage/capacity. This is a NO-NO!!!
> >> Of course it will work for awhile BUT the output volage/amperage will drop
> >> when the smaller battery is exhausted.
>> DC Electricity.101 tells you that 3 batteries in series MUST be of the SAME
>> electrical size as to voltage/amperage/capacity. This is a NO-NO!!!
>> Of course it will work for awhile BUT the output volage/amperage will drop
>> when the smaller battery is exhausted.
>> Good Health to All.
>> gb.
George and List...
It should be noted that connecting batteries of differing voltages in SERIES
presents no particular problem, just that the battery having the lowest
ampere-hour rating will die off first.
(For non-technicians: NEVER connect batteries of differing voltages in
PARALLEL!)
...Tom
George wrote:
> DC Electricity.101 tells you that 3 batteries in series MUST be of
> the SAME electrical size as to voltage/amperage/capacity. This is a
> NO-NO!!!
>
> Of course it will work for awhile BUT the output volage/amperage
> will drop when the smaller battery is exhausted.
And if you k
Daniel Holly wrote:
>
> I have it on good authority that there is one factor missing from the plans.
> I had some private correspondence with Cisco until a few months ago...
> In it he revealed that he added a can of "Hawaiian Grande" beer to the
> CS solution as an accelerator.Spiking the f
HAHAHAHAHA!! *That's* funny!
Dameon
_
> DC Electricity.101 tells you that 3 batteries in series MUST be of the SAME
> electrical size as to voltage/amperage/capacity. This is a NO-NO!!!
>
> Of course it will work for awhile BUT the output volage/amperage will drop
> w
george.bere...@nashville.com wrote:
>
> Greetings;
>
> DC Electricity.101 tells you that 3 batteries in series MUST be of the SAME
> electrical size as to voltage/amperage/capacity. This is a NO-NO!!!
>
> Of course it will work for awhile BUT the output volage/amperage will drop
> when the small
r with the
beer produced optimum CS concentration and produced it quicker.
Hope this helps
Dan
=
==
==
-Original Message-
From: bjs1779
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Date: Monday, July 27, 1998 11:33 AM
Subject: R
Greetings;
DC Electricity.101 tells you that 3 batteries in series MUST be of the SAME
electrical size as to voltage/amperage/capacity. This is a NO-NO!!!
Of course it will work for awhile BUT the output volage/amperage will drop
when the smaller battery is exhausted.
Good Health to All.
gb.
Debbie, Are these your complete set of plans? If so, you might be
well-served to consider the following: (1) If these are high capacity
batteries (100-600 amp), then, without any current-limiting feature.it
is a potentially very dangerous scheme. The reason being that ANY
inadvertant to
Brooks Bradley wrote:
>
> Debbie, Are these your complete set of plans? If so, you might be
> well-served to consider the following: (1) If these are high capacity
> batteries (100-600 amp), then, without any current-limiting feature.it
> is a potentially very dangerous scheme.
Brooks
These are marine batteries used below. Is this a viable plan for good CS? Deb
>
> Debbie,
>
> Well lets try it this way:
>
> Place the three batteries in a row. Connect positive to negative poles,
> this creates a 'series' connection causing the battery voltage to
> increase. 2-12 volt batterie
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