[RFI] Tap water is a poor conductor.

Joe nss at mwt.net
Tue Sep 26 14:46:43 EDT 2017


I agree on the white powder! I worked at a factory that got very hot in 
the summers. Average days was 120's, a hot august day was in the 130's 
They installed a mister cooling system where under very high pressure 
1000+ psi water was misted via literally hundreds of nozzles that 
created literally a water "FOG" the droplets were sooo fine. They would 
evaporate literally withing a couple of feet of the nozzle.

Then it was first noticed on dark surfaces the white haze. eventually it 
was everywhere.

They even tried water softeners and really did not help.

It was a terrible Mess.

Joe WB9SBD
Sig
The Original Rolling Ball Clock
Idle Tyme
Idle-Tyme.com
http://www.idle-tyme.com
On 9/26/2017 1:38 PM, Roger (K8RI) wrote:
> Yes, tap water conducts electricity better than distilled BUT the 
> resistivity is many times that of  of steel, Aluminum, or copper wire.
>
> Vaporizers that use a pair of electrodes to vaporize water usually 
> require the addition of a "little" salt to get enough conductivity to 
> heat the water. I said "little" because too much will pop the circuit 
> breaker.
>
> These things are really messy to use as any minerals in the water will 
> be deposited on surfaces in the room as a white powder.
>
>
> 73, Roger (K8RI)
>
>
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