________________________________________ Dennis Cravens wrote: I would say that one wind tunnel type series experiments I did was nothing more than 2 dozen small co-deposited wires with various additives. Their test tubes were all placed in the same water bath (in series for the same current, and zeners across the electrodes in glass tubes for the same net voltage across each so the power inside each were roughly the same). I then just compared them. I did not start with absolute measures, just rough relative measures from the mean. It allowed for rapid screening of various additives. You dont have to have a micrometer to see which piece of spaghetti is the longest just line them up.
Hi Dennis, I would be interested in the results of this experiment. Was it reported anywhere? What was the electrolyte and what materials did you test. Perhaps a gas phase version of this idea could be used to evaluate Ni-H materials applied to wires at constant power. This is probably not better than Brian Ahern's experiments. It would be interesting to provide atomic H rather than H2 to separate the splitting of the H2 from the heat generating possibly OU effects. There are obviously many problems in applying this to gas phase. It is however quite a neat trick for electrolytic experiments. George Holz Varitronics Systems geh...@optonline.net