I'm at present using baking soda ¾ teaspoon to 1 liter of water but find it to be very corrosive on the stainless steel components. Is there an alternative to baking soda?
Sorry, this is not for the ny sayers and skeptics because I know it works. So spare me the crap.
Browns gas works, yes it does. I have been working on my project for years.
a great catalyst is alluminum shavings. what works almost too good for my setup is the alluminum stop leak powder sold at auto stores for leaky radiators. It is also corrosive but not like the mess that boric acid baking soda must make. My electrolyizing chamber is rather large too though, about 7 liters. Producing the combustible is then not a problem. the problem is temporary storage, acidity, and most of all, slowing the proccess down by heat element control and water temp controls 12VDC heater elements to make a cup of hot water while on the road are what I use throughout the electrolysis chamber. Before compression I usually keep the compressor input at about 15PSI but not more than 25 PSI. I have found that too high of pressure creates a little too much moisture for the early drying stages just before compressing into a tank. My unit is totally home made and custom by trial and error over a long period of time. The good part about browns gas is that you can mix it with air and run it seamless with gasoline up to a certain ratio before becoming unstable.
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