Hello again;
I was doing some research reading on browns gas, and I came across an interesting statement.
Browns gas takes up 1860 times as much area as the water it came from.
If you fill a chamber with browns gas, that is say 100 feet high, and then ignite the gas, it produces an instant vacuum in the chamber. If the bottom of that chamber is submerged in a tank of water, the vacuum produced by ignition of the gas will suck the 100 foot chamber full of water. This water could then be used to run a generator turbine.
Well the article I read stated that the amount of energy needed to create enough browns gas to fill the chamber is much less then the energy needed to pump that much water into the chamber. The 100 foot chamber is only used here as a picture for you readers, the article didn't mention a specific sized chamber.
The point is that filling a chamber any size with browns gas uses very little energy, but the vacuum created by igniting it is able to do a lot of work.
The article also stated that when brown's gas ignites it produces a large amount of electricity. Like an instant fuel cell going off. The article stated that you can regain about 75 % of the electricity needed to make the brown's gas. The article was posted by someone who has been experimenting with brown's gas since the 1960's and has a very deep understanding of it.
This looks like a very interesting concept for further study. The vacuum and electricity produced by igniting brown's gas. And this isn't taking into consideration the heat given off by combustion.
If these findings are accurate, we truly have an over unity device, that a child could build.
Till later happy experimenting.
Harold.