In alt.engineering.electrical [email protected] wrote:
| On Aug 20, 4:19 pm, [email protected] wrote:
|> In alt.engineering.electrical [email protected] wrote:
|>
|> |> >But would he know exactly what gas these bubble contain
|> |>
|> |> He's very clear about that, in one of previous battery wisdumb
|> |> demonstrations, he asserted that "When charging, the gas given off is
|> |> Hydogen Sulphide"http://groups.google.com/group/alt.solar.photovoltaic/msg/1c82f8d7690...
|> |
|> | True, despite your usual quoting out of context. Batteries can and
|> | will give off Hydrogen Sulphide under high charge rates.
|>
|> How high a charge rate are you talking about? Specific numbers, please.
|>
|> --
|> |WARNING: Due to extreme spam, googlegroups.com is blocked. Due to ignorance |
|> | by the abuse department, bellsouth.net is blocked. If you post to |
|> | Usenet from these places, find another Usenet provider ASAP. |
|> | Phil Howard KA9WGN (email for humans: first name in lower case at ipal.net) |
|
| Any thing I tell you, you will say is not true. So, with that in mind
| you can search;
|
| Intelec2001.pdf
|
| Here is the abstract
|
| "Abstract
| This investigation of hydrogen sulfide (H2S) in VRLA
| cells produced three major results. First, VRLA
| cells produce significant amounts of H2S even at
| normal float voltages. Second, the lead dioxide in
| the positive plates absorbs much of this H2S. Third,
| this ?H2S cycle? in VRLA cells results in an
| equilibrium concentration level of no more than 1
| ppm of H2S in the gas space of a typical cell. The
| data further suggests that even this low amount
| may decline over time."
|
| This article is several pages and is quite detailed.
For the benefit of others, this is the paper I found:
http://www.philadelphiascientific.com/Intelec2001.pdf
Several keyword based searches did not turn up this document on the first page
of 100 results from Google. That could be due to the flood of pages that
described H2S detectors that were battery operated, and thus had the keywords
being searched.
When you find important articles/documents/papers, try to save the full URL.
If there is any doubt about it, at least the actual contents can be used in
another search to see how many other places it might be found at. What I do
is save such things in a file path that is the same as the URL starting at
the hostname. That way, if I need to cite an article, I can put http:// in
front and give the original URL.
| On Aug 20, 4:19 pm, [email protected] wrote:
|> In alt.engineering.electrical [email protected] wrote:
|>
|> |> >But would he know exactly what gas these bubble contain
|> |>
|> |> He's very clear about that, in one of previous battery wisdumb
|> |> demonstrations, he asserted that "When charging, the gas given off is
|> |> Hydogen Sulphide"http://groups.google.com/group/alt.solar.photovoltaic/msg/1c82f8d7690...
|> |
|> | True, despite your usual quoting out of context. Batteries can and
|> | will give off Hydrogen Sulphide under high charge rates.
|>
|> How high a charge rate are you talking about? Specific numbers, please.
|>
|> --
|> |WARNING: Due to extreme spam, googlegroups.com is blocked. Due to ignorance |
|> | by the abuse department, bellsouth.net is blocked. If you post to |
|> | Usenet from these places, find another Usenet provider ASAP. |
|> | Phil Howard KA9WGN (email for humans: first name in lower case at ipal.net) |
|
| Any thing I tell you, you will say is not true. So, with that in mind
| you can search;
|
| Intelec2001.pdf
|
| Here is the abstract
|
| "Abstract
| This investigation of hydrogen sulfide (H2S) in VRLA
| cells produced three major results. First, VRLA
| cells produce significant amounts of H2S even at
| normal float voltages. Second, the lead dioxide in
| the positive plates absorbs much of this H2S. Third,
| this ?H2S cycle? in VRLA cells results in an
| equilibrium concentration level of no more than 1
| ppm of H2S in the gas space of a typical cell. The
| data further suggests that even this low amount
| may decline over time."
|
| This article is several pages and is quite detailed.
For the benefit of others, this is the paper I found:
http://www.philadelphiascientific.com/Intelec2001.pdf
Several keyword based searches did not turn up this document on the first page
of 100 results from Google. That could be due to the flood of pages that
described H2S detectors that were battery operated, and thus had the keywords
being searched.
When you find important articles/documents/papers, try to save the full URL.
If there is any doubt about it, at least the actual contents can be used in
another search to see how many other places it might be found at. What I do
is save such things in a file path that is the same as the URL starting at
the hostname. That way, if I need to cite an article, I can put http:// in
front and give the original URL.