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Author Topic: One Million Watts in the Palm of Your Hand?  (Read 4053 times)

rukiddingme

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One Million Watts in the Palm of Your Hand?
« on: July 19, 2016, 12:06:04 PM »
But what are hydrinos? According to Brilliant Light Power, they’re a different form of hydrogen and are in fact the “dark matter” that is believed to form the bulk of all matter in the universe.

I’m no physicist, but the process involves known technologies including a molten metal catalyst and a photovoltaic panel to convert the light into current. It seems fantastic, and we’ve seen all manner of radical "overunity" and fusion power projects, but this is the first I’ve seen that has gone to the testing stage with a practical device using realistic hardware.

Frankly, I’m skeptical of any technology that claims it can create clean, abundant megawatt level power from something the size of my desk, but we’re not going to criticize anybody prepared to back up their claims with verifiable testing.

We’ll follow Brilliant’s progress and report back. If they’re for real, everything in the energy and manufacturing industries changes. Let’s see what happens.

http://www.engineering.com/AdvancedManufacturing/ArticleID/12664/VIDEO-One-Million-Watts-in-the-Palm-of-Your-Hand.aspx



Lakes

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Re: One Million Watts in the Palm of Your Hand?
« Reply #1 on: July 20, 2016, 09:39:01 AM »
I imagine it could be quiet difficult to a million watts in the palm of your hand. :)

gotoluc

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Re: One Million Watts in the Palm of Your Hand?
« Reply #2 on: July 20, 2016, 05:36:21 PM »
I saw this some months back and remembered that I had a similar idea using the water spark I was working on 8 years ago which produced very intense light.


Video demo: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FxnRQ7fkWtE


Just place a PV panel in front of this spark.
One of the problems was the spark would vaporize just about any material which is exactly what they found as well.


Luc

seychelles

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Re: One Million Watts in the Palm of Your Hand?
« Reply #3 on: July 20, 2016, 08:51:12 PM »
So Lucky luc what happen to this brilliant water power ignition invention.
Did any body succeeded in powering a petrol motor with that..
 

gotoluc

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Re: One Million Watts in the Palm of Your Hand?
« Reply #4 on: July 21, 2016, 05:30:42 AM »
So Lucky luc what happen to this brilliant water power ignition invention.
Did any body succeeded in powering a petrol motor with that..


No, a petrol motor aka ICE is not suited for this technology. Many of us tried but all failed to prove solid efficiency improvements using it in a ICE.
In fact, over not much time it starts to vaporizes all metals it comes in contact with.
That was the first main issue Brilliant Light Power had to overcome.

When I saw the results back then I thought of using it as a powerful light source would be better suited then in ICE dinosaur technology. Now Brilliant Light Power has proven it to be a better approach. There may also be better uses for it in the future.

Luc

lancaIV

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Re: One Million Watts in the Palm of Your Hand?
« Reply #5 on: July 21, 2016, 02:23:33 PM »
https://worldwide.espacenet.com/publicationDetails/description?CC=US&NR=4004210A&KC=A&FT=D&ND=3&date=19770118&DB=EPODOC&locale=en_EP


The effect of the statistics of fluctuation effects on the thermally caused electrical fluctuations across a single resistor is that the output power is independent of the physical size or the number of conducting electrons in the resistor. This power is shown by C. J. Bakker and G. Heller in the March 1939 issue of Physica (pp. 262-274) to be approximately kT/t, with k being the Boltzmann constant, T being the absolute temperature, and t being the mean time between collisions for an electron. The effective mean time t to give the fluctuation power in a metal resistor is computed in this paper and the result shows an effective electron velocity of 10@8 cm/sec and an effective mean free-path length of 10@-@6 cm so that the effective mean time t is of the order of 10@-@14 sec for electrons at room temperature. For this value for t and for T = 700 DEG K the fluctuation power available is of the order of 10@-@6 W. Conductors placed every 10@-@5 cm on an extended heated resistive film result in an available power output of 10@8 W of available fluctuation energy per square meter of a resistive film at a temperature of 700 DEG K when these are used as the resistor 26 in FIG. 4. The thickness of layers 1 and 3 is comparable to the spacing of modules 7 and 8 in the plane of layers 1 and 3. [/font][/size]
For cubical modules of this size, the potential power output per cubic centimeter of modules is 10@9 W.
( 1 Mio W = 10@6 W)

                                     One cubic centimeter in the Palm of your hand  ;)  physics theory has sometimes no border


http://rexresearch.com/marks/marks.htm Worked with helium