standard electrolysis.
I haven't done the tests myself but Stanley Meyer's patent suggest a lot can be done with HV, maybe not as far as "brute force" electrolysis but to get the water ringing (resonating); then again, high V or I may not even be necessary at the right frequncies. Consider that our understanding of principles is evolving. Learn as much as you can from everyone and go with the flow.
Other posters here like AlaskanStar raise some interesting issues/ possibilities, like using a magnetron at pitifully low power input. I see at least 10 microwave ovens a week, tossed at the side of the road, and reading the online repair manuals suggest that 98% of the time the magnetrons are still good. There is in fact a patent for making hydrogen using microwave energy (US 4,265,721 --Hackmyer) at the industrial frequency of 915Mhz. (Those industrial magnetrons are pricey tho.)
The interesting possibility is adding a catalyst to the water, i.e. a colloidal metal or two, which acts like an extension of one or both of the plates with vastly increased surface area. (The other plate of course, might be the container itself, assuming stainless steel.) Cheap materials like sodium, magnesium or iron sulfates might qualify as catalysts. See work of Linnard Griffin:
http://l2.espacenet.com/espacenet/bnsvi ... &LG=en&DB=
EPD&PN=US2005042150&ID=US2005042150A1+I+
&
http://www.harti.com/griffin/
A.Star suggests that just wrapping a coil around a bucket might be all that's necessary to activate the catalyst @ the required frequency, (while I might opt for insulated wire inside the bucket instead, where the water can absorb the microwaves instead of you.) If you're using a magnetron to power the coil, you'll want it to be well shielded also, although the input is low, just to be safe.Statistics: Posted by thrival — Mon Jul 18, 2005 6:17 am
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