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I watched it all the way, he put water in to prime it. Has a check valve on the bottom end as well.Read the comments on the first video - it's a fake. That section of tubing where the magnets are is empty, then the device is plugged in, there's a surge in the plastic hose, and a gusher pours forth? Nah, something like that has no self-priming capacity.
Jeez, Doug - I though you were the cynical one...
We have all the water we need right now thank you.Slow day, ehh? Whip one up this afternoon, let us know how it works.
It wasn't a magnetohydrodynamic unit that drove the Red October sub. It was Sean Connery. The sub was terrified of disappointing Sean, and moved from fear alone.Hey, how do you think the submarine in The Hunt for Red October worked? They wouldn't have shown it if it wasn't real. Still like the movie though.
It wasn't a magnetohydrodynamic unit that drove the Red October sub. It was Sean Connery. The sub was terrified of disappointing Sean, and moved from fear alone.
It still wouldn't have worked because the magnetic field is stationary or oscillating instead of moving in a line. It would need three phase or at least a run capacitor.Induction pumps are used in moving molten solder in wave soldering machines, so yeah, that's legit. In THEORY, if they created a super conductive brine for that demo, it MIGHT have worked a little. But the lack of a suction vortex or even turbulence on the inlet pipe where it goes into the ditch is proof that he connected to a pipe going to a real pump somewhere out of frame.
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