Is It Possible To Build A Computer Controlled Feedback Circuit For HHO Generator?

Written By: admin@promotemyev - Mar• 04•11
Stanley Meyers VIC circuit from Nov 1990 Patent

Stanley Meyers VIC circuit from Nov 1990 Patent

 

HHO or water electrolysis has been on my mind since I saw the video of Stanley Meyer driving his water powered dune buggy, gas free. I would for years, search the web and YouTube for the latest experiments on breaking water into this powerful energy source. 

The garage engineers would pour over Meyer patents, and try to make their own version. The most famous circuit was design by Mr. Lawton. A simple 556 chip pulsing a on, off, and on, pulse train, that you would tune like a radio to the mysterious frequency. Trying to use less power than the original Faraday discovery is the goal of every dreamer – experimenter. 

The engineers would look at the patent documents, and say that it is a block diagram, and not to take it literally. It is a patent not a schematic. With no part numbers and may be even objects mis-drawn on purpose to protect the property, it is common place to mislead the competition. 

Looking at them they have a Nicola Tesla look to them. Converting low voltages to very high, with a ramping up of the pulse as it goes though the “Feedback resonance circuit”. Look at it close and you notice a coil and a curious little note… 

Mr. Meyer the inventor must have known the mysterious frequency, right, and kept it a secret, and now lost forever after his death?

No he did not!

Water has some of the most amazing properties. My tap water is completely different than yours. 

Factors that change the right frequency: Temperature, the mixed components that are dissolved in the water, like salts, and its electromagnetic properties. I can not believe that there is one all harmonic frequency for all water. You might hit it once, but as soon as the bubbles start to come off, it changes. 

So it must be impossible, and never attainable, because nature is protecting it, and keeping water the most stable molecule there is.

So let’s give up, but wait…

 

What about if you could build a circuit that after the first pulse was sent, you stopped… and listened? Waited and then sent a new set of pulses that was ajusted based on the information it heard. 

Back to the Meyer’s drawing, there it is, called the (Pulse indicator Circuit Fig 9) A coil on the Voltage intensifier Circuit coil that is it’s ear, right in the middle of the action. Sending back to the (Phase Lock Loop Circuit Fig 7) that scans for the right frequency.  I believe it is the key to what I have not scene anyone even address as needed. 

How would I even think that I could even try to build something so complex?

I am not sure. But I have an ideal how to start. Get a computer involved, because the pulse is going to need to be updated many times a second.

Am I qualified with the electrical and computer programming skills?

No, I am just so curious and gullible enough to believe in a massively wild guess, and on a dream that Meyers was real, and what He figured out was not a hoax.

What do I get out of it if I am wrong? Learn about electronics, understand more about physics, may be help someone out there with their HHO water experiments. I will try to post all of what I come up with. 

So far I have researched how to protect the computer from the project, and there is a lot of ways of doing that. One way is using a little micro-controller that processes commands on it own after you download it with your program. 

Another is to use a USB adapter interface, Po-Keys is one and Velleman has some. The Velleman K8055 is a kit that has 2 analog and 5 digital Inputs and 2 analog and 8 digital Outputs for less than $60, and you can program it in Visual BASIC 2010 Studio, that is free to download from Microsoft. With Velleman’s sample program you can be controlling in just a few clicks. 

I messed with BASIC a long time ago, so I am learning one line at a time, and saving for my 8055. I will post photos as I put the kit together. It all looks like a great year long, or lifetime long project, what ever comes first, and what ever the out come, it sounds like fun! 

Posted by: Ron G.

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