Hi folks.
I'm new here and I'm trying to learn from all of you.
This site is a great resource for people like me, (newbies), who are learning about the potential benifits and aspects of Brown's gas.
Please forgive my foolish question, but I live in a very Liberal mind everybody's business left coast city up the road from Hinkley, CA, (Seattle).
Erin Brockovich made aqueous solutions of this form of chrome famous. It seems a far greater risk to humans if an inhalable dust in plating operations is present that workers breathe, (to an uninformed idiot: as me). That said: the huge 1996 or some such award against P G & E and Hollywierd made this particular form of chrome an issue for the used electrolyte I will soon begin to produce.
In my (early stage) research it seems that electrodes made of Stainless Steel 316L and an electrolyte of KOH (Potassium Hydroxide) are components of the (so far) most effective and efficient 12 volt generators of HHO gas to catalyze combustion in transportation equipment.
I have no doubt that this old technology HHO catalyst can produce measurable gains in efficiency and has a great deal of merit, and one day could become a significant way for all of us to import less oil and save money.
That all said, (and I hope you folks don't choose to debate the above premis(s) of this question), WHAT DOES EVERYONE DO WITH THEIR USED ELECTROLYTE?????
Here in Seattle it is problematic that the "house hold" hazmat clerk will allow a person, (who gives the full and truthful disclosure), to dump the stuff into the county/city's hazmat facility. If a person accumulates a 55 gallon plastic drum it can be hauled off by private hazmat companies for $400 to $500 per 55 gal barrel.
Any solutions found by the rest of you, (until better electrodes then stainless 316L are found)?
Thanks in advance for your replys.