well,
like i mentioned earlier, there was a time when it was considered impossible for man to fly. look at what we've accomplished to date.
there was a time when it was asumed man could never travel to space. we've been there a lot.
there was a time when it was assumed the sound barrier would never be broken. yet, we've had supersonic jets since the 50's.
this is much easier than all of those accomplishments.
BTW,,,,,,,where'd you get the things to make yours look so good? i bought the nylon rod and the nuts /& washers so far. was cutting a pvc pipe for my casing. i didn't get the smaller tubes for my bubblers yet. also, i used stainless switch plates. it looks like you made your own plates?
I orderd the cast acrylic tube and most of the fittings and hardware from McMasterCarr.com. I had the plates and straps custom cut out of 22 gage 316 SS sheet and got them from OnlineMetals.com. My bubblers I made out of 1" clear schedual 40 pvc pipe and I got that from McMasterCarr as well.
I'm in the process of writing a detailed construction manual for my booster complete with parts list and source of supply. My operational booster looks nothing like the pics I posted though, but it's still looks pretty cool. I've also changed the plate arrangment a bit and went to a duel 9 plate cell vs the duel 8 plate cell in the pics. The extra plate is installed on the outside of each cell so it's like this.
+ being the postive strap
- being the negative strap
I being a plate
/ being a nylon 1.4mm washer
[] being a 316 SS 4mm jam nut
[]+I/I/I[]I/I[]I/I[]I/I[]-I/I[]I/I[]I/I[]I/I/I+[]
I was able to use thinner washers and jam nuts than what the Smacks Booster plans call for since my plates don't have curved edges like the wall plates. I used a small grinding wheel to prep the plates and rough them up creating more surface area. The outer plates are 2" X 6" then 2.5" x 6" then 3" x 6" then 3.5" X 6" and the straps I had cut at 1" X 12" The entire core is also shrink wrapped using 4" heat shrink tubing and the starps are also heat shrinked from the top of the cell up to the screw cap. That helps to force the gas bubbles up to the top instead of leaking out the sides of the stack. It also creates more of a convection current inside the cell to aid in gas production and circulation of the electrolite and works really well. The duel 9 plate cell produces more gas at less current draw. Ran it tonight on the bench for about an hour and started with a 9amp current draw on a cold cell and produced 1.5 LPM in the first 5 minutes of run time. At 1 hour I was getting almost 2 LPM at a 12 amp current draw and I could still pick the cell up with my bare hands. The cell was hot but not too bad. I'd compare it to holding a cup of coffee in a ceramic mug.