Ken, if I remember correctly, you are talking about my solar hot water
system that can be used to heat the entire house. It works like a
glass thermos bottle. The sun comes thru the glass, it hits a
selective coating and creates heat, the heat cannot escape thru the
glass thermos. The heat is then transferred thru a copper thermal
pipe and mechanically coupled via thermal grease to an insulated
copper water jacket. The water is only circulated thru the water
jacket and not the glass tubes. In this manner, if a tube gets
broken, it can be swapped out without affecting the rest of the
system. I bought mine from Bill Fitch at this website.
http://www.wearesolar.com/
PS: If you want to purchase these in
much larger quantities, Angela in China can ****p you a sample of
twenty '30 tube units' directly from the factory at a substantial
discount.
As for the magnetic motor, when I get it running, I'll either show it
to you at the hovercraft rally or I will ****p it to you. I have this
engineer friend who has been filing for patents with some of my hair
brained ideas. He says that both our names are on these patents. I
really don't care but it would be nice to see technology being used.
My latest idea is to create a small magnetic motor that illuminates an
LED flashlight that hangs on the wall. You come home, give the motor
a spin and you have light. When you want the light out, you simply
palm the motor to stop it from turning. I have so many ideas, that I
have no fear of someone stealing an idea or two. Take the idea and
make it work. I've been blessed with just enough time and money to
pursue my many hobbies. Too many hobbies...
On Jun 9, 10:27=A0am, Ken Roberts <for...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> On Jun 8, 9:18 pm, Buy_Sell <werksp...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>
> > I've received 200 super magnets fromwww.dealextreme.comandI plan on
> > finding out for myself if magnetic motors exist or not. =A0I hope that
> > you can make it to the hover rally in Ohio this month. =A0I might be
> > able to make a believer out of you.
>
> The only way you could suspend complete disbelief is to show me a
> working model I can tinker with, and at least partially disassemble.
> Even then I'll probably be skeptical.
>
> One thing that would be really interesting though is some details
> about those solar panels you mentioned earlier. =A0I'm unfamiliar with
> the technology and interested in adding solar to my house.


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