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Author Topic: Power Control Circuit Help  (Read 11012 times)

Aphasiac

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Re: Power Control Circuit Help
« Reply #15 on: July 06, 2007, 09:17:31 PM »
@ IronHead:

The water itself is electrically charged . All you really need to do is have the positive side of an LED wired to the water itself and the negative to ground  when the level gets low the light goes out. If you want this to control another device  use a relay.

Smart thinking! Seems sometimes the simplest things are by far most ingenious. I would never have thought to use the water to close a circuit... and here I was out shopping for level sensors & plunger valves. lol. 

Thanks! I'll try it.

Mark.

keithturtle

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Re: Power Control Circuit Help
« Reply #16 on: July 07, 2007, 04:28:47 AM »
That' the idea I was futile in expressing earlier; set the "water out" pipe at the level of the top of the plate stack (or better, put it high in the side and raise the plates as needed).

Keep water circulating as needed to abate temps, and withdraw HHO from the same "water out" pipe.  Is that right?

Now to build it.

BTW IronHead, have y'all or anyone esle built that KIM (Pat 6,443,725) HHO burner?  Looks like it would be an excellent heater.

Turtle

IronHead

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Re: Power Control Circuit Help
« Reply #17 on: July 07, 2007, 04:39:13 AM »
Similar, for cooking though. I don't want to hijack this mans thread .

Draco Rylos

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Re: Power Control Circuit Help
« Reply #18 on: July 07, 2007, 04:39:36 AM »
It seems we have gotten WAAAY of target here. ;)   I was asking for help trying to figure out what IC Logic chip to use for my circuit to replace the relays that I originally drew into my drawings. One suggestion on another forum was a 4000 CMOS logic chip for my needs. What other ICs are capable of doing what I want to do with my circuit?

Draco Rylos

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Re: Power Control Circuit Help
« Reply #19 on: July 07, 2007, 05:17:07 AM »
Sorry about the double posting, but I was wanting to tell everyone that the way my cell is going to be arranged, the water is drawn in from above the electrode stack and then pumped back into the cell from underneath. I have changed my drawing to make the way I have it planned out to work.

Draco Rylos

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Re: Power Control Circuit Help
« Reply #20 on: July 12, 2007, 01:54:58 AM »
Now I'm needing a suggestion of what to use for my Upper and Lower Water Level Sensors on my cell. Looking at the drawing below, what is recommended to use for that purpose? All they are going to do is turn the different parts of the power circuit that I have been working on on and off.
« Last Edit: July 13, 2007, 12:42:30 AM by dukenukem »