New SunCell Video
A Promising Clip Of The SunCell Running
Brilliant Light Power posted a brief video of the SunCell in action to their YouTube page:
The text accompanying the video was brief but very promising:
“Two minute excerpt of today’s Station 3 run regarding a new system at low input power. Cell was stopped to make adjustments. New technology performed very well.”
Low input power is helpful on several dimensions:
Confirming that the SunCell is working as advertised becomes easier. Outside experts attempting to validate the SunCell will have two core tasks: ascertaining the electrical input power into the SunCell and assessing the total energy of the light output. Given a constant level of light output, the lower the input power, the easier it is to rule out any funny business. A SunCell putting out 100 kW of light with 50 kW of measured electrical input is one thing, but a SunCell putting out that same 100 kW of light on 1 kW of measured input is another and much harder, if not impossible, for honest skeptics to dismiss.
The final commercial product becomes more compelling. Lower input power requirements likely make the startup process less burdensome and increase the total net energy output of the device due to lower parasitic losses: less of the gross output electrical power will be required to loop back in to provide the required ongoing input power.
We await definitive figures on total electrical input power and measured light output, but hopefully preliminary figures will come soon. My educated guess is that we will see something like 1-5 kW of electrical input power and 50 to 100 kW of measured light output power, which would be an astounding achievement. I suspect getting to higher levels of light output will be possible but require further engineering refinement to keep SunCell components from degrading over time.
The SunCell is looking closer and closer to being demo ready, and one can easily envision awareness of an amazing new primary energy source going viral quickly thereafter.
Hydrino is the future, and the future is Brilliant.



After ignition what is the fuel consumption like? 1 oz or cup or quart per hour or?