This is my first post so be nice lol
I know not a lot of people have tried aluminum plates. and I was reading up on the pros and cons of aluminum and it seemed like a field that needs some experimenting on. Running to the local dollar store, I picked up some lint traps made of aluminum wool. Having read up on the subject, I know aluminum can only use baking soda as an electrolyte. I haven't done an LPM test yet but would ballpark it to be around .5 lpm.. I was just wondering if anybody had tried a setup similar to this. I am currently running this generator in a 2002 Saturn SL2 and now the worst gas mileage I can get is 40 mpg and the best was about 47.8 with no 02 sensor mods and no EFIE.
Also I would also like to bring up the though of stainless steel wool as an electrode. The aluminum wool was supposed to have corroded far too quickly to be used as a "build and forget" generator, but I've been running this one for about two weeks now and I've only noticed very slight browning of the positive wool bunch. The water has remained quite clear with very little discoloration. We have a bubbler and injected it directly into his air box right above his filter so it doesn't get filtered but still has enough room to mix with the air.