On Sun, May 15, 2011 at 7:00 PM, Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote:
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Terry Blanton
>
>> So, how is he stripping he hydrogen of its electrons?
>
> How do you know he is not adding, rather than stripping :)

Well, most fuel cells strip the electrons and the proton ions pass
through the membrane.  The semi-free electrons become the power
circuit and recombine with the protons and become oxidized at the
output.

Are you saying that he is sending holes around the circuit and has a
electron permeable membrane?

I think it is more likely that he is using the spillover catalyst
effect to strip electrons which provide work and recombine when the H+
hydride ions pass through the membrane to be oxidized.

Now maybe the free electrons are made "free-er" as a hydrino-hydride.
This would mean that they would not really recombine as water but as
an oxidized hydrino-hydride.  And WTF would that be?  Would you drink
it?  Maybe with a single malt as a mixer, eh?

T

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