This weekend I tried electrolysis using an ATX computer power supply. I don't have a battery charger, but computer power supplies can put out 12V with 15+amps, and 5V with even more, so I thought that would even be a better substitute.
I was digging around the junk pile at work looking for a decent supply. A hardware engineer turned me on to some that they were using to power some motherboards before their real power supplies came in. They had to hack them to get them turn because the motherboards weren't standard Intel motherboard. Two things were required by this power supply for it to turn on, a lead to the mother board had to be grounded and a load had to be on the 5V line. They had shorted the lead and put a nice big resister on the 5V line Current output was 20 Amps 5V, 16 amps 12V, Perfect
Sorry I don't have pics. That's just the way I am. If you are interested I can point you to the ATX spec.
Anyhow, talking to the electrical engineers, they were most concerned about the current draw being too big and suggested getting a 1/4 ohm resistance in the circuit to limit the current. They actually said the 5V may be better since it could drive more amps. I didn't have those things sitting around and radio shack was out of the way, I just decided to try it.
I clipped all the power leads on the connectors and put them together 5v =Red, 12V Yellow, 3.3 Orange, Ground Black.
Made my bucket of water and washing soda. Used an old lawn mower blade as the electrode and connected it and the plane to the 12V lead on the power supply (and ground), then plugged the extension cord attached to the power supply. Nothing blew up, but nothing impressive was happening either. I checked the bucket and little bubbles were slowly coming up around the plane. Not impressive.
Worried about current, I had spaced the annode and electrode as far apart as possible. I didn't have a multimeter, so I couldn't measure anything. Getting brave, I turned it off and put them closer together. Better. Closer even better. Finally about an inch part was OK. So it took about a day to do the #7, switching it around to get it all in the 5 gallon bucket.
I have nothing to compare this too, so I'm not sure how it worked compared to a charger. I will probably borrow a multimeter from work to see what the load/current is. Also, my jumper cables were pretty long. I may get some shorter alligators for it.
Let me know if you are interested in trying and I can give you more tips.
I'll post before and after picks of the plane when I a chance.
I was digging around the junk pile at work looking for a decent supply. A hardware engineer turned me on to some that they were using to power some motherboards before their real power supplies came in. They had to hack them to get them turn because the motherboards weren't standard Intel motherboard. Two things were required by this power supply for it to turn on, a lead to the mother board had to be grounded and a load had to be on the 5V line. They had shorted the lead and put a nice big resister on the 5V line Current output was 20 Amps 5V, 16 amps 12V, Perfect
Sorry I don't have pics. That's just the way I am. If you are interested I can point you to the ATX spec.
Anyhow, talking to the electrical engineers, they were most concerned about the current draw being too big and suggested getting a 1/4 ohm resistance in the circuit to limit the current. They actually said the 5V may be better since it could drive more amps. I didn't have those things sitting around and radio shack was out of the way, I just decided to try it.
I clipped all the power leads on the connectors and put them together 5v =Red, 12V Yellow, 3.3 Orange, Ground Black.
Made my bucket of water and washing soda. Used an old lawn mower blade as the electrode and connected it and the plane to the 12V lead on the power supply (and ground), then plugged the extension cord attached to the power supply. Nothing blew up, but nothing impressive was happening either. I checked the bucket and little bubbles were slowly coming up around the plane. Not impressive.
Worried about current, I had spaced the annode and electrode as far apart as possible. I didn't have a multimeter, so I couldn't measure anything. Getting brave, I turned it off and put them closer together. Better. Closer even better. Finally about an inch part was OK. So it took about a day to do the #7, switching it around to get it all in the 5 gallon bucket.
I have nothing to compare this too, so I'm not sure how it worked compared to a charger. I will probably borrow a multimeter from work to see what the load/current is. Also, my jumper cables were pretty long. I may get some shorter alligators for it.
Let me know if you are interested in trying and I can give you more tips.
I'll post before and after picks of the plane when I a chance.