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Re: Help needed with voltage divider



Original poster: "S&JY" <youngsters-at-konnections-dot-net> 

Marco,

If you have used your divider, then have you considered the possibility that
you are producing H2 and O2 bubbles via electrolysis, and that the bubbles
are not air?  Certainly this happens at DC and low frequency AC.  Is there a
frequency above which polarity is switching too fast for H and O molecules
to have time to get ripped out of the water?

Have you considered using less complex solutions to dividers such as using a
long length of carbon impregnated black fuel or vacuum line hose such as one
can buy at an auto parts store?   They work fine as high value resistors
(and they don't produce bubbles!)
  --Steve Y.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tesla list" <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
To: <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
Sent: Tuesday, July 27, 2004 8:39 AM
Subject: Help needed with voltage divider


 > Original poster: "Denicolai, Marco" <Marco.Denicolai-at-tellabs-dot-com>
 >
 > Hello all,
 >
 > I am also proceeding with my water voltage divider roughly described at
 >
 > http://www.iki.fi/dncmrc/work/hv_divider.htm
 >
 > My sealed distilled water column gives a 1:60 division ratio and a
 > second (compensated) stage at the bottom of it a 1:10 ratio, for a total
 > of about 1:600 ratio. The first stage resistance is about 1.2 Megaohms.
 > On the column top I have two copper pipes (6 mm o.d.) I used to pump
 > water in and air out. I used an old refrigerator pump to extract all the
 > air I could from the water. Then I sealed (soldered) the pipe tops. The
 > pipe tops and the bottom networks remain both enclosed inside two
 > rounded aluminium caps. Just a shielded cable going out of the ground
 > (bottom) terminal.
 >
 > After two weeks from the sealing air bubbles started again forming
 > inside the (plexi) tube. I am pretty sure I have no leaks. There are
 > also no sediments inside. The water is still clear. So, what's going on?
 > How pros do to get read of the air dissolved in the water?
 >
 > Anybody who can help me with this?
 >
 > Regards
 >
 > --
 >
 >
 >