[Land-speed] OT: Green House Gases.. and an Electrolysis Question or 2..

Glen Barrett speedtimer at beyondbb.com
Sun Jul 8 08:40:31 MDT 2007


Who and where are all of those thermometers located for the last 200 years, 
who recorded the data was it one of Al Gores grandpas.??
GB
----- Original Message ----- 
From: <ddahlgren at snet.net>
To: "'dan warner'" <dwarner230 at yahoo.com>; <land-speed at autox.team.net>
Sent: Saturday, July 07, 2007 10:47 PM
Subject: Re: [Land-speed] OT: Green House Gases.. and an Electrolysis 
Question or 2..


> Global warming works over millenia and we have history fior a couple of
> hundred years suggests the data base is a bit shallow..
> Dave
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: land-speed-bounces at autox.team.net
> [mailto:land-speed-bounces at autox.team.net] On Behalf Of dan warner
> Sent: Sunday, July 08, 2007 12:20 AM
> To: land-speed at autox.team.net
> Subject: Re: [Land-speed] OT: Green House Gases.. and an Electrolysis
> Question or 2..
>
>
> Not only that, how many carbon credits are being used by all the people
> going to, performning at, etc. Al 'I invented the internet' Gore's
> concert today?
>
>  Plus - how hopped up was his dope smoking kid's Prius that ran 100 mph
> in Orange County this week?
>
>  DW
>
> drmayf <drmayf at mayfco.com> wrote:
>  Too hot to work out in the shop much today so I figured I would sit
> around and scratch my brain a bit.. Been thinking about green house
> gases and how they work. Co2 and methane, I think (dangerous) heat the
> earth by reflecting infrared heat back downward. Ie they trap the heat
> in the atmosphere. Now here is my question...if they reflect the heat
> back inward wouldn't they also reflect the heat from the sun in those
> wave lengths back into space? Seems that would be a net zero gain. Any
> atmosphericic chemists or other smart people out there that can explain
> it to me?
>
> Next, how the heck do I figure out how much hydrogen and oxygen are
> produced for given voltage, current and electrode sizes? I know that
> electrolysis works at a minimum of 1.2 volts and just milliamps, but
> what if the volts was say 12 volts or 24 volts or 40 volts and 20 amps?
> If the electrode is too large will it be effective as a gas producer
> because the current density is lower?
>
> mayf, way off and far out in a hotter than hell pahrump...
> _______________________________________________
> dwarner230 at yahoo.com
>
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