if it worked! but i have my doubts, unless we rethink the entire tank design...
if it worked! but i have my doubts, unless we rethink the entire tank design...
How about a tightly rolled mesh just at the top of the tube to sustain the liquids from flowing out of the tube?
until i get some pyrex capillary tubes i just don't know!
im going shopping tomorrow!!!
This looks really really promising.
So, a couple of things come to mind - this seems to eliminate any need to oxidize the wick, since there's no longer direct electrical contact.
It seems you could be pretty "sloppy" with coil wrapping in general since it shod behave pretty much like a coil with no wick in it at all. As long as you aren't shorting it to itself, and it's making good enough contact with the Pyrex to transfer the heat, you'd be good to go.
Also, it seems like any type of wick could work? Since the coil is insulated from the wicking material, I would guess silica/cotton, etc. would be less likely to burn. Or would it not get hot enough at all?
if it worked! but i have my doubts, unless we rethink the entire tank design...
I don't think it would work consistently enough with just the capillary action of the tube. A lot of other forces come into play that determine how far the liquid would travel up the tube. Think of a barometer, which works on this principal, with the height of the fluid travel determined by ambient air pressure alone.
However, the "rethinking tank design" gave me an interesting idea.
Think compact Genesis style atty for bottom feeder mods.
You may be right - it could be calculated using a formula for height of a meniscus. Not sure how much impact normal barometric pressure would influence it. Could be alot or a little.
Some one more comfortable with math could run a calculation for a range of pressures easy enough to find out.
Barometric pressure was just one example. For example, as soon as the tank was tilted so that the tube wasn't submerged, it would drain. Temperature would effect it. As would the thickness of the liquid.
These aren't necessarily unsolvable problems. I'm not intending to be critical, just sort of thinking the concept through, because it's interesting.