Do ya ever wonder how often Steven Hawking gets laid these days? Talk about Brain Knots!! Originally Posted by MrGizMore about knots:
An old retired sailor puts on his old uniform and heads for the docks once more, for old times sake.
He engages a prostitute and takes her up to a room.
Hes soon going at it as well as he can for a guy his age, but needing a little reassurance, he asks, How am I doing?
The prostitute replies, Well, old Timer, your're doing about three knots.
Three knots? He asks. Whats that supposed to mean?
She says, You're knot hard, your're knot in, and your're knot getting your money back.
Originally Posted by SOULMANIKE
Do ya ever wonder how often Steven Hawking gets laid these days?Actually, a very find book, and IMHO, not that difficult to follow. A bit dated now, however. His newer book, The Universe in a Nutshell is good and a bit more up to date, although not quite as good as the original. I also recommend Schrodinger's Cat in the same field.
How many have tried to read "A Brief History of Time" ? Originally Posted by MrGiz
I'm attempting to develop what most would consider a fuel cell from scratch. The basic principle is to have solar powered electrolytic hydrolysis, then force the H2 and O2 gases to recombine by passing through charged plates (more or less the equivalent of a battery). The resulting water to be fed back into the original reaction, and the remaining O2 vented into the atmosphere. I'm building this in stages, with the initial model being a scale model (ultimately, I intend to use this to produce and store enough renewable electricity to run a moderately sized farm). The primary goal overall is to be as close to 100% efficient as possible and find most components as naturally occurring in nature (readily available, relatively little refining or usable completely unrefined). Please PM for further detail. Originally Posted by SinningI have heard of this somewhere recently.
I'm attempting to develop what most would consider a fuel cell from scratch. The basic principle is to have solar powered electrolytic hydrolysis, then force the H2 and O2 gases to recombine by passing through charged plates (more or less the equivalent of a battery). Originally Posted by SinningSo, how could that possibly be more efficient than just not using the fuel cell and instead, using the solar power directly? Using the power from solar panels directly also has the advantage that solar panels don't explode. In the unlikely case that you have enough solar panels to generate a surplus of power you could store for use at some other time, why would your fuel cell have some advantage over existing batteries? Unless you have a really good answer for those questions, invest your money in something else.