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Hydrogen for oil burners

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Hydrogen for oil burners

Postby lafargue1 on Fri Dec 05, 2008 1:06 am

Could you use a hho kit with home heating oil? Has any ever tried this before?
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Re: Hydrogen for oil burners

Postby EddieRock on Fri Dec 05, 2008 10:05 am

Hho is a very fast burning gas. Oil burners are slow burning so I don't think it would be a good option. For a car, you want to ignite the gas very fast so hho as an additive works very well.

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Re: Hydrogen for oil burners

Postby rmgray on Fri Dec 05, 2008 10:04 pm

How 'bout in a gas furnace?(properly jetted of course)...........................Newguy/rmg
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Re: Hydrogen for oil burners

Postby elly policarpio on Sat Dec 06, 2008 12:23 am

Just asking,

how about using HHO gas in house hold cooking as a replacement to the very expensive and unpredictable price of LPG or liquefied petroleum gas, has anyone tried to experiment on it? or is it very dangerous to try?
I know of course that we will be using HHO on demand system for it is very dangerous to store it in a tank, but if it is really possible to use it in cooking, how many litter of hho gas per minute should be the required production of the said hho generetor?

:?: :?: :?:

thanks,
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Re: Hydrogen for oil burners

Postby EddieRock on Sat Dec 06, 2008 4:55 pm

Guys, HHO burns VERY fast and at 1800 degrees. If you put propane in a balloon and light it you will get a huge flame. If you put HHO in a balloon and light it it WILL EXPLODE and be extremely loud.

I'll post a youtube vid on this.

I would not recommend HHO for either application.

Others... Thoughts?

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Re: Hydrogen for oil burners

Postby event-horizon on Sat Dec 20, 2008 12:05 am

Re:Focus
As you can see it is very easy to lose "focus" on what this forum is about. Can this not so "new" fuel source be used for other things such as cooking, heating etc, yes it is a possibility, in our life time? maybe not. The need is to take care of one thing at a time with what we can do now! Oh how the big three ranted and and raved that they were "striving" and "reinvesting" for our future and better economy of their products. Now each one has their hand out and crying "help me". But for all the jobs that will or may be lost we as a country united will say " here you go, do not let us down"! (which is more than I got when layed off). But any who, HHo is the way to go !!
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Re: Hydrogen for oil burners

Postby Jens on Sat Dec 20, 2008 3:40 pm

But why use hydrogen for cooking? It is a most difficult fuel to store, at much higher pressures than LPG. It also easily ignites, and burns faster than almost any other fuel. It puzzles me why HHO gas has such a positive effect on the fuel economy of a gasoline driven engine. To me it looks like mixing the HHO gas in the air before it enters the engine improves the combustion process, making it faster and hotter and cleaner, helping to release more of the energy already in the gasoline. It also increases the octane rating, making for smoother running. But producing the HHO gas requires electricity, and requires more energy to produce than it will release in combustion, so there is no net gain of energy in using an HHO electrolyzer and then burning the gas. Maybe it will help an oil burner burn cleaner than before, but that's about all, if we can't solve the storage problem.
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Re: Hydrogen for oil burners

Postby hogwater on Fri Jan 16, 2009 2:38 am

HI all New to this place but will not hold back....I have some ideas in these places but for here use as a fuel or added fuel in the vehicle is where we need to look so OK but I heard a lot of the old in the tank thinking and I believe we have to be able to open the doors and look at all areas and ways to use a fuel to reduce the need for the big boys product.So thinking outside of the tank is what will give us the best chances BUT the testing and uses MUST be done safely ideas can be wild but USE must be calm and controlled and as SAFE as we can or they will label us all as dangerous and crazy and use that to have any individual work shut down.HHO is an old product and has well known properties but has been bypassed for some uses now may be the time to relook at them.Electricity can be gotten in different ways and fuel produced for less is what this is about.
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Re: Hydrogen for oil burners

Postby uawwildbob on Sun Jan 25, 2009 11:48 am

EddieRock wrote:Guys, HHO burns VERY fast and at 1800 degrees. If you put propane in a balloon and light it you will get a huge flame. If you put HHO in a balloon and light it it WILL EXPLODE and be extremely loud.

I'll post a youtube vid on this.

I would not recommend HHO for either application.

Others... Thoughts?

EddieRock

Re; thats not true. HHO dose not burn at 1800 degrees . By its self its under 300 degrees. I've heard 270 degrees. iT'S WHEN u ADD IT TO SOMETHING THAT IT DOSE IT'S MAGIC.tungsten has the highest melting temp. we know of and it will melt it. Its like a miracle of science to watch a hho welder at work. It's just amazing
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Re: Hydrogen for oil burners

Postby EddieRock on Sun Jan 25, 2009 8:42 pm

You're right. HHO burns at 259 degrees.

Quote from Denny Klein talking about HHO from http://www.humanresonance.org/hho.html:
"The temperature of the flame is 259 degrees Fahrenheit. But it instantaneously rises to the melting temperature of whatever it touches, Klein said. Those temperatures can exceed 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit.

"You can't do this with any other gas," he said."

So, depending on what you're melting, it will get to that temp.

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