RE: Keely and latest postings disassociation of water.

Carrigan, Ken ( (no email) )
Thu, 8 Jul 1999 09:24:52 -0400

Hi Marinus!

Some Physical laws and gas laws for ya to chew on....
Boyles law says that at a constant temperature the volume
if a given quality of gas varies inversly as the pressure
to which the gas is subjected. For a perfect gas .. LOL
means.. P1 * V1 = P2 * V2. Assumes again that temperature
remains the same.

Another law is this... The number of molecules in one Mole
or gram-molecular weight of a substance is Avogradros number,
which is 6.0225 x 10^23!! That is to convert your water (h20)
into a gas!

Then of course there is Charles Law (says in short V1 * T1 =
V2 * T2) where V is GAS volume and T is temperature.
It can also be expressed as this... (best formula) PV=nRT
Where P = pressure, V = Volume, R is the gas constant and
depends on the units used (8.2056 x 10^35 units are
(10-2 m^3)(atm)(kmole^-1)(K^-1), n = number of molecules.

I let you use these to figure out whatever ya need then. but
these laws hold true for "reality" and not vacuum or aethic
theories of which I know no laws exist yet (maybe quantum
mechanics has some) and certaintly no tests bear out!

v/r Ken Carrigan

ps... remember the units!! Make sure they are all the same!

-----Original Message-----
From: Marinus Berghuis
To: interact@Keelynet.com
Sent: 7/9/99 12:54 AM
Subject: Keely and latest postings disassociation of water.

Fellow searchers.

I have a few questions, the mathematical genii can solve for us.
Keely stated that he obtained 20000 p.s.i from 3 drops of water inside a
14
inch sphere.
To hold this pressure with the technology of the day, needed at least a
5
inch thick wall.
At the most he had a cavity of 4 inches diameter at 20000 p.s.i of gas
pressure because that is what it would be in this material world. How
many
cubic feet of gas would this equate ??
I cannot afford to get a sphere made but I can afford to buy a c.n.g.
tank
rated at 2000 p.s.i. with a safety limit of 6000 p.s.i at 100 litre
capacity. Everybody is throwing them out and in fact I own one but is
1200
km away.

We can forget about how Keely vibrated a 150 k.g sphere at 42600 c.p.s
as
he used his mind power to get inside the thing. However we have the
story
of the energy liberated from a quarts tube vibrated at that level using
750watt
It is obvious to me that at that level, we are not talking about
hydrogen
and oxygen but at another gas (Brown's gas) of which we have various
anecdotes including dirigibles where people used oars to actually propel
their vehicle.
So my question to the mathematical inclined is:
A 100 litre tank at 6000 p.s.i., How many cubic feet of gas does this
contain.
As three drops inside a 6 inch sphere contained a certain number of
cubic
feet, how many drops of water do I have to vibrate to explode into
Browns
gas to fill the c.n.g. cylinder to 5000 p.s.i.
It will not be very hard to put inside a c.n.g. cylinder a piezo
vibrator
with a recepticle fed with certain quantities of water at certain
intervals
to produce the pressure required to run an engine of some sorts, a
turbine
would be most efficient or a steam engine set up. In fact it could be
regulated to feed say 1 drop of water per minute and continually vibrate
at
the required level by way of a power amplifier costing next to nothing
to run.
Therefor I am asking all of you to get your brain into gear, I won't
mention the other end !! But we need to get cracken and speed things up
!!!
I have just about had it !!
I am no mathematical genius but a practical tinkerer and able to build
amplifiers, perhaps buy a wave generator and somehow get hold of a
barium
titanate vibrator.
The engine will appear from nowhere I am sure to try it out.An ordinary
car
engine with the power input working as normal would rotate under
pressure
if you make a manifold that can sustain a reduced pressure say 1000
p.si.
And if it is Brown's gas and implodable, the full answer is there
already
with the Joe cell experiment.
Please come back to me with the figures and as it costs next to nothing
to
make, How about a mass effort to get it going.
John Worrell Keely would laugh all the way to heaven I am SURE !!!

Greetings

Ren

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