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Re: Joe Eck hits Tc = 77 C, 170 F

Posted: Sun Feb 16, 2014 5:46 pm
by ladajo
As I recall, Eck talked previously about the difficulty of manufacturing any usable quanity of his compounds. I don't remember any specifics, just something to that effect. I could also be completely out to lunch on it. I am not bothered to look it up right now. Maybe later, or someone else remembers/looks it up.

Re: Joe Eck hits Tc = 77 C, 170 F

Posted: Mon Feb 17, 2014 8:17 pm
by pbelter
ladajo wrote:I wonder if our South African friend's theory predicts these results.
Johann where are you?

He is still out there. I just found his patent application for "Electrical Conductor". The patent details say it is a superconductor.
It was published on Jan 30, 2014

http://www.faqs.org/patents/app/20140027788

Seems though that it was originally applied for in 2012

http://www.sumobrain.com/patents/wipo/E ... 40611.html

Re: Joe Eck hits Tc = 77 C, 170 F

Posted: Mon Feb 17, 2014 9:58 pm
by ladajo
Now we get to see what he does with it!

Yeah for Johan!

Re: Joe Eck hits Tc = 77 C, 170 F

Posted: Mon Feb 17, 2014 11:11 pm
by Betruger
Best of luck Dr Prins!

Re: Joe Eck hits Tc = 77 C, 170 F

Posted: Tue Feb 18, 2014 11:29 pm
by DeltaV
Nice find, pbelter.

Re: Joe Eck hits Tc = 77 C, 170 F

Posted: Wed Feb 19, 2014 12:23 am
by ladajo
I agree, and meant to say that earlier. Nice find.

Re: Joe Eck hits Tc = 95 C, 203 F

Posted: Mon Oct 13, 2014 3:22 pm
by DeltaV
http://www.superconductors.org/95C.htm

Boiling water just 5 degC away...

Re: Joe Eck hits Tc = 95 C, 203 F

Posted: Tue Oct 14, 2014 3:40 pm
by Tom Ligon
Boiling water is an interesting choice of milestones. I can boil water at 95C by reducing pressure a little, but most commercial uses of it use elevated pressure. But steam would seem to be the enemy ... Eck reminds us that the copper oxides are highly hydroscopic, and his tests are done soon after annealing.

Just about every application I can think of for room temperature superconductors would not involve steam, which I generally associate with the sort of Promethean technologies Watt would have considered revolutionary. HTC is for 21st-century thinking, not 18th.

When do I get this in wire form? Probably as a powder packed into a metal tube, hermetically-sealed. ;)

Re: Joe Eck hits Tc = 95 C, 203 F

Posted: Tue Oct 14, 2014 4:40 pm
by GIThruster
Well of course steam is a reference to turbines and generating electricity, and steam turbines operate under pressure so you can't reduce the pressure and have a decent turbine.

What you can do is step up to 21st century technology and plan to use a supercritical CO2 turbine. They're smaller, lighter, and vastly more efficient than water/steam turbines, but one wants to operate them much hotter so Eck has a ways to go yet.

DOE has cash to burn for these things. Does anyone know if Joe is tapped into the funding keg?

Re: Joe Eck hits Tc = 95 C, 203 F

Posted: Tue Oct 14, 2014 9:16 pm
by KitemanSA
Excuse me? The reason to shoot for 100+ÂșC transition temperature is to keep the thing easily cooled below said temperature. Just stick it in a pipe full of unpressurized water.

Re: Joe Eck hits Tc = 95 C, 203 F

Posted: Tue Oct 14, 2014 9:56 pm
by hanelyp
Given that an operating superconductor doesn't produce heat, the cooling system just has to deal with heat from outside. Which might be a lot of heat in a fusion reactor. 95C is plenty warm for most applications, if you can get wire to deliver bulk superconductivity.

Re: Joe Eck hits Tc = 95 C, 203 F

Posted: Tue Oct 14, 2014 11:10 pm
by KitemanSA
hanelyp wrote:Given that an operating superconductor doesn't produce heat, the cooling system just has to deal with heat from outside. Which might be a lot of heat in a fusion reactor. 95C is plenty warm for most applications, if you can get wire to deliver bulk superconductivity.
The superconductor doesn't produce heat, but the splices often do.

Re: Joe Eck hits Tc = 95 C, 203 F

Posted: Tue Oct 14, 2014 11:31 pm
by MSimon
hanelyp wrote:Given that an operating superconductor doesn't produce heat, the cooling system just has to deal with heat from outside. Which might be a lot of heat in a fusion reactor. 95C is plenty warm for most applications, if you can get wire to deliver bulk superconductivity.
Well that is not strictly true. Micro instabilities produce small amounts of heat.

Re: Joe Eck hits Tc = 110 C, 230 F

Posted: Fri Nov 07, 2014 7:04 pm
by DeltaV

Re: Joe Eck hits Tc = 110 C, 230 F

Posted: Sat Nov 08, 2014 12:40 am
by paperburn1
Everybody keeps ignoring the 400 pound gorilla in the room. Any temperature above the boiling point of CO2 is a good working temperature. What I need to be is the product available in quality, quantity and at a price point that meets copper wiring. Then I can start making neat stuff with it