The patent claims that its battery potential did not go down, for a period of seven years+, with only water being replaced periodically. If it can last that long, or a fraction of that, I'm happy.
I'll search a few forums (any particulars, Bob?), and see if I can find any results or comments on it.
Commenting that
It produces pure hydrogen (seemingly, since oxygen isn't mentioned), so byproducts are kept in the container, possiibly oxidized versions of metals in, or of Chemalloy itself. Perhaps it only has a very, very high oxidation state, to. I can't see an easy way of testing that they still are Chemalloy, and not broken-down parts of it (starting metals). There are ways, like reacting it with various acids and chemicals to see what happens (colour change, precipitate), but I don't have the various needed chemicals. I might be able to convince my chem teacher to let me do some tests after school (or at lunch) to test what's in the used-up powder. I'll also do tests of the unused Chemalloy (in cold water, so it doesn't all react during the test on me) powder to see what happens, and compare results.
If the used powder shows identical, or very, very similar results (small tolerance for inconsitencies in tests), then we'll know the chemical compound has been altered, and we can narrow it down to one or two specific (or all of the metals, as the case may be) metals that react. Could be as simple as an acid-metal reaction, but the amount of production shown in the video, and its being increased (or started in the first place, using the bars) by electricity, along with no tests results to go by (my own or otherwise, as of this moment) keep me from saying that for certain.
It could simply oxidise, in which case we should be able to de-oxidise the metal with a strong NaOH solution, or using another metal (like aluminium) that is a powerful oxidiser (oxygen remover). Should be doable in a methanol, or other oxygen donor-free liquid, I think. Having a small "station" to re-charge the Chemalloy would be awesome if possible. Once it's used up, run it through the machine, and re-use, keeping one "batch" in a vacuum for use while the other is de-oxidized. We'll see how it goes.
Should be interesting.
