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  1. Naked Science Forum
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  4. Can rust be removed by an electric field?
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Can rust be removed by an electric field?

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Offline vdblnkr34 (OP)

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Re: Can rust be removed by an electric field?
« Reply #20 on: 23/04/2022 13:52:11 »
Quote from: Bored chemist on 23/04/2022 13:50:06
Quote from: vdblnkr34 on 23/04/2022 12:49:47
No. i did not, still looking how to do that.
And , since biodiesel has to have less than 10 ppm of sulphur, you did not make biodiesel.

So why did you tell this lie?

Quote from: vdblnkr34 on 23/04/2022 01:05:13
I found out how to make biodiesel from car tires.

I did, with the sulphur. Small amount.
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Offline vdblnkr34 (OP)

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Re: Can rust be removed by an electric field?
« Reply #21 on: 23/04/2022 13:52:37 »
Quote from: Bored chemist on 21/04/2022 19:26:43
Quote from: vdblnkr34 on 21/04/2022 19:13:54
Quote from: Bored chemist on 21/04/2022 19:00:20
Quote from: vdblnkr34 on 21/04/2022 18:47:55
In my understanding electricity is a some kind of movable vibrations.
In reality, it is not.

Why. No one have any other proof.

Have you looked?

Not much.
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Offline vdblnkr34 (OP)

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Re: Can rust be removed by an electric field?
« Reply #22 on: 23/04/2022 13:54:32 »
Quote from: evan_au on 21/04/2022 22:55:52
Quote from: vdblnkr34
electricity is a some kind of movable vibrations
Does this sound like a layman's interpretation of quantum field theory?

Might be electricity is the bridge between quantum world and world of physics?
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Offline vdblnkr34 (OP)

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Re: Can rust be removed by an electric field?
« Reply #23 on: 23/04/2022 14:00:17 »
Quote from: Bored chemist on 23/04/2022 13:51:02
Quote from: vdblnkr34 on 23/04/2022 13:36:50
Not much.
Experiments with electric impulses. The way electricity travels, reacts to isolated materials.

Example:
A tiny electric impulse was send through the metal ring, than something split impulse into two equal impulses, when two impulses reach the other side and met, they canceled themselves immediately.
That is gibberish.
Can you show pictures of the experiment and the results?

I read this approximately 10 years ago from electric experiments forum. I have seen the pictures and oscillator. If I find this thread again,  I will.
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Offline Bored chemist

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Re: Can rust be removed by an electric field?
« Reply #24 on: 23/04/2022 14:16:43 »
Quote from: vdblnkr34 on 23/04/2022 13:52:11
Quote from: Bored chemist on 23/04/2022 13:50:06
Quote from: vdblnkr34 on 23/04/2022 12:49:47
No. i did not, still looking how to do that.
And , since biodiesel has to have less than 10 ppm of sulphur, you did not make biodiesel.

So why did you tell this lie?

Quote from: vdblnkr34 on 23/04/2022 01:05:13
I found out how to make biodiesel from car tires.

I did, with the sulphur. Small amount.
If it has sulphur in it, then it is not biodiesel.
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Offline vdblnkr34 (OP)

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Re: Can rust be removed by an electric field?
« Reply #25 on: 23/04/2022 14:22:01 »
need to remove sulphur and test it in the lab.

Its possible to make biodiesel of any oil. Not only cooking oil, basically any oil, even engine oil will do.
« Last Edit: 23/04/2022 14:36:04 by vdblnkr34 »
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Offline Bored chemist

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Re: Can rust be removed by an electric field?
« Reply #26 on: 23/04/2022 15:31:39 »
Quote from: vdblnkr34 on 23/04/2022 14:22:01
need to remove sulphur and test it in the lab.

Its possible to make biodiesel of any oil. Not only cooking oil, basically any oil, even engine oil will do.
So, you do not understand what "bio" means.
Why not look it up, rather than continuing to make a fool of yourself?
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Offline vdblnkr34 (OP)

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Re: Can rust be removed by an electric field?
« Reply #27 on: 24/04/2022 01:38:45 »
Real explorers not afraid of being look like a fool.  8)
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Offline Bored chemist

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Re: Can rust be removed by an electric field?
« Reply #28 on: 24/04/2022 10:20:59 »
Quote from: vdblnkr34 on 24/04/2022 01:38:45
Real explorers not afraid of being look like a fool.  8)
Sure, but what you are doing is the equivalent of exploring the arctic in shorts and a t shirt.
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Offline vdblnkr34 (OP)

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Re: Can rust be removed by an electric field?
« Reply #29 on: 24/04/2022 14:13:14 »
Not really. I do it from around the corner. Safety first. The most important part is that experiments has positive result.

I have a question about the oil with sulphur in it.

Can i treat it with the hydrogen gas? Or any metal that react with sulphur?

« Last Edit: 24/04/2022 14:18:23 by vdblnkr34 »
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Offline Bored chemist

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Re: Can rust be removed by an electric field?
« Reply #30 on: 24/04/2022 14:25:39 »
Quote from: vdblnkr34 on 24/04/2022 14:13:14
The most important part is that experiments has positive result.
Some of the most important experiments in the world had negative results- for example the Michelson Morley experiment.

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Offline Origin

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Re: Can rust be removed by an electric field?
« Reply #31 on: 24/04/2022 14:55:16 »
Quote from: vdblnkr34 on 24/04/2022 14:13:14
The most important part is that experiments has positive result.
As Bored chemist alluded to, a well crafted experiment has results that are clearly positive or clearly negative.  An experiment that has ambiguous result is the only bad experiment.  In my career the most enlightening experiment I ever ran completely killed my hypothesis, but saved me a lot of wasted time, effort and money.
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