@ Jim:
I have also had very good results from using the small pencil leads, although they are easily broken. But I notice that your voltage after only a couple of seconds of readings drops fast. Maybe you can mention at what levels that cell will maintain at, even after a few minutes of being connected to a meter, or to a red or white led. As it is acting as a capacitor which starts high but quickly drops. In any case that's quite a voltage its got.
The ratio of cathode to anode is a mistery, but the hardest part is getting a higher current level that will maintain its level under a load. That is much harder to do with a small cell, and is where mass is important.
NZ
I have also had very good results from using the small pencil leads, although they are easily broken. But I notice that your voltage after only a couple of seconds of readings drops fast. Maybe you can mention at what levels that cell will maintain at, even after a few minutes of being connected to a meter, or to a red or white led. As it is acting as a capacitor which starts high but quickly drops. In any case that's quite a voltage its got.
The ratio of cathode to anode is a mistery, but the hardest part is getting a higher current level that will maintain its level under a load. That is much harder to do with a small cell, and is where mass is important.
NZ
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