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Author Topic: Hydrosonic Pump  (Read 150248 times)

FreeEnergy

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  • Posts: 2014
    • The Freedom Cell Network
Re: Hydrosonic Pump
« Reply #90 on: July 24, 2014, 04:00:31 AM »
any news on this?
any replicators?
anything???????????????????????????????

Curlyrocks

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  • Posts: 1
Re: Hydrosonic Pump
« Reply #91 on: November 07, 2014, 03:25:50 AM »
Hi I'm new to this form and new to the more advanced theory's of over unity power so please be kind.

A few years ago before I took my break on over unity power and off grid living I had heard about the Griggs water pump and was interested in it but had no shop or any where to experiment with one. Things are starting to change on that front though and hopefully I can have something set up soon. For a while I got out of the whole over unity thing cuz of life and such but now am back into it.

I was watching a special on the water crisis affecting much of America right now and part of the world and got me thinking about desalinating water. I remembered the hydrosonic pump would probably be the best way to continuously turn water to steam but was worried about salt build up. When I looked into them the 2nd time I noticed one of their prime selling points was that the device did not scale.

This looks like the perfect device for desalinating sea water and making distilled water all around. Can any one think of anything I might be missing?

mscoffman

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Re: Hydrosonic Pump
« Reply #92 on: November 07, 2014, 05:09:01 PM »
Curlyrocks,

I basically agree with you but I have a problem with machining the rotor of a Griggs pump
from a monolithic block of metal. These days that is a fairly difficult and expensive way to
go if you want to manufacture a mechanically balanced rotor. The main thing is that
the exact details of the multiple hole sets are likely to be proprietary and finding the best
configuration is likely to be heuristic meaning that there is no analytic way to optimize a
design.

There may be a way of molding and machining a ceramic rotor that could be
better in the cost department. One additional problem might be the problem of
material wear over the longer term.

On here overunity.com are external specifications for something called  DRJ-200 that was a Griggs
heat pump already optimized by a person named Dr. Nowak. He had personal problems that
left his goal set divided but I do think that the device he described was real but was expensive
because it was not yet mass produced. This is good for finding the efficiency specsifications of
an optimized machine.

A better and a more manufacturable alternative for enthusiasts alternative might be the friction heaters
described on here in it's own thread.

----

On water desalination or clarification for a distillation type outcome - I think that an overunity electrical
production device will supply power for these types of devices widely. But there have been a number of
individual scale water clarification units that can be used in this service that have efficiencies beyond
steam heating distillation units. So you should wait until you have guaranteed OU before attempt to
pursue this.   


:S;MarkSCoffman