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RE: Liquid properties



Original poster: "Luke" <Bluu-at-cox-dot-net> 

I kind of assume he meant 100 celsius.
Water boils at 212 f and that is 100 c.

The water cannot get any hotter than that (atleast not much) all heat
added to it would be used to convert the water to steam and boil it off.

Luke Galyan
Bluu-at-cox-dot-net
http://members.cox-dot-net/bluu

-----Original Message-----
From: Tesla list [mailto:tesla-at-pupman-dot-com]
Sent: Friday, March 12, 2004 5:25 PM
To: tesla-at-pupman-dot-com
Subject: Re: Liquid properties

Original poster: dave pierson <davep-at-quik-dot-com>


 >The problem would be to keep the high-voltage electricity out of the
 >cooling water. The water-cooled quenched gap that I was discussing in
 >the thread about "Quenched gap" uses water tanks with no circulation.
 >The water may boil, but keeps the gap temperature around 100 degrees
 >at most while there is enough water.
     100C

     ?
        8)>>
        best
       dwp