Re: [Vo]:RE: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:A competent observer's assessment of Defkalion‏ - Revisited

2012-01-04 Thread Charles Hope
You've already told her to shut up several times, so that's repetitive and 
boring as well. 




On Jan 4, 2012, at 13:48, Mark Iverson-ZeroPoint zeropo...@charter.net 
wrote:

 Mary Yugo stated/asked,
 “Same response to the same repetition of absolute nonsense about Rossi and 
 Defkalion.  You always seem to object to my response but not to the inanity 
 that spawned it.  Why do you think that is?”
  
 That’s easy… and I’ve explained it to you before.
 I have stated my reservations (more than once) about the whole affair 6 
 months ago;  and because I try to abide by the guidelines of this forum, I 
 don’t want to repeat what I have already stated.  What part of that don’t you 
 understand?
 -Mark
  
 From: Mary Yugo [mailto:maryyu...@gmail.com] 
 Sent: Wednesday, January 04, 2012 10:36 AM
 To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
 Subject: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:A competent observer's assessment of 
 Defkalion‏ - Revisited
  
  
 
 2012/1/4 Mark Iverson-ZeroPoint zeropo...@charter.net
 Mary Yugo stated, for the millionth time,
 “A much better theory is that, as Rossi says, they have nothing to show.”
  
 Same old tired repetition, despite numerous requests that you avoid it.  You 
 just never learn…
 Is there really a brain behind the name or is it just a very poor 
 implementation of Artificial Intelligence responding to vortex posts?  If AI, 
 then the programmer forgot to #include learn.h
 -Mark
 
 Same response to the same repetition of absolute nonsense about Rossi and 
 Defkalion.  You always seem to object to my response but not to the inanity 
 that spawned it.  Why do you think that is?
  


Re: [Vo]:Defkalion described how they got Rossi's formula

2012-01-03 Thread Charles Hope
What about Jed Rothwell's secret source who just came back with glowing reviews?



On Jan 3, 2012, at 4:35, Jouni Valkonen jounivalko...@gmail.com wrote:

 
 
 On 2 January 2012 04:35, OrionWorks - Steven Vincent Johnson 
 orionwo...@charter.net wrote:
 Not having direct access I think it's difficult for any of us to determine 
 whether DGT or Rossi is ahead in the game. DGT strikes me as better 
 organized, company wise. The organization is probably being run like a 
 disciplined corporation.
 
 I cannot understand where did you get such an impression. Defkalion is still 
 nothing but an unpopular discussion forum in the Internet. Nothing else. 
 There is only one spokes person, Xanthoulis, who is making bold claims, 
 without any real proofs.
 
 Everyone who has personal knowledge on Defkalion, does not trust them, and 
 that is just two individuals in the whole world, i.e. Rossi and Stremmenos. 
 There is only one known person who has visited Defkalion »laboratory» and 
 he/she came back with an impression that 'I would not want to work with these 
 guys'. (or something similar)
 
 There is nothing real ever presented on the company. And every scarce 
 empirical evidence (a statements from three individuals) what we have, points 
 into direction that Defkalion is a phony company. For me this kind of 
 determination, what is the real nature of Defkalion, is very simple to do, 
 because I trust Rossi.
 
–Jouni
 


Re: [Vo]:Out for a while

2012-01-02 Thread Charles Hope
Enjoy your trip. Alaska must be quite an experience this time of year. I intend 
to have pondered your papers when you have returned. 

 

On Jan 2, 2012, at 11:37, Horace Heffner hheff...@mtaonline.net wrote:

 I have to take care of a rental in Anchorage that was just vacated.  Makes me 
 a little nervous considering Gene Mallove's  history with that kind of thing.
 
 I will not be able to follow things here for a while.
 
 Best regards,
 
 Horace Heffner
 http://www.mtaonline.net/~hheffner/
 
 
 
 



[Vo]:How I propose to encode math in vortex discussions

2011-12-31 Thread Charles HOPE
(You'll have to visit the URL at the end to follow the post's links)


For a surprisingly long time, communicating rich mathematical formulas has
been difficult on the Web, in e-mail, or in plain text discussion groups.
There are two tools that take the pain out of this process.
Writing

Codecogs offers a very nice equation
editorhttp://codecogs.com/latex/eqneditor.php,
with a complete set of WYSIWYG buttons that operate a workspace which
builds an equation in LaTeX, while rendering a graphic image in real-time.
The resulting image can be exported in various graphic formats, or the
LaTeX can be copied to your clipboard.
Reading Avital Oliver wrote a lightweight browser plug-in for Firefox which
renders LaTeX equations, called TEX THE WORLD http://thewe.net/tex/. It
has since been ported
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/mbfninnbhfepghkkcgdnmfmhhbjmhggnto
Google Chrome. It scans every web page for equations between [; and ;] and
renders them automatically.

Together these make it possible to easily produce LaTeX formulas, already
legible to scientific professionals and able to survive the plainest of
ASCII environments, and to view them as rich formulas if rendered through a
modern web browser.




http://luminoustop.typepad.com/charles_hope_and_the_lumi/2012/01/how-to-read-and-write-mathematics-on-the-internet-including-web-based-e-mail-.html




-- 
Never did I see a second sun
Never did my skin touch a land of glass
Never did my rifle point but true
But in a land empty of enemies
Waiting for the tick-tick-tick of the want
A uranium angel
Crying “behold,”
This land that knew fire is yours
Taken from Corruption
To begin anew


Re: [Vo]:Spontaneous parametric down-conversion (SPDC)

2011-12-30 Thread Charles HOPE
On Thu, Dec 29, 2011 at 11:58 PM, Horace Heffner hheff...@mtaonline.netwrote:




 The deflated state electron, pre-fusion, is not below ground state energy.
   It is a degenerate form of the ground state, or whatever state the
 hydrogen nucleus and associated electron occupy in the lattice.




How can the ground state be degenerate?  Do you have any arguments using
bra-ket notation?





 Preferable to what for describing what?



Isn't the Takahashi approach preferable to the deflation fusion approach
because it maintains the standard model? The only reference to deflated
hydrogen comes from vortex.



 Huge numbers of atoms are involved in heavy element transmutation.  Can
 you imagine Bockris' surprise when he found them? there was no prior
 indication that such energetic events were taking place.



I see.  There really are several phenomena all confusingly anomalous!




 I would guess people want more math. It's hard to convey over email, but I
 have a solution for that I'll write up this weekend.



 I do not think the problem is a lack of math. The problem is that I have
 not explained the processes with enough simplicity that a child can follow
 them.  I sincerely doubt that anyone on this list, at any rate, wants or
 needs more math for convincing.  Math only obscures the underlying
 concepts.



I've never heard a scientist express this sentiment before.  For me, I find
rather the opposite.  My eyes glaze over when confronted by paragraph after
paragraph of prose, without equations to really explain what's going on. I
don't think children should understand this material!




-- 
Never did I see a second sun
Never did my skin touch a land of glass
Never did my rifle point but true
But in a land empty of enemies
Waiting for the tick-tick-tick of the want
A uranium angel
Crying “behold,”
This land that knew fire is yours
Taken from Corruption
To begin anew


Re: [Vo]:Spontaneous parametric down-conversion (SPDC)

2011-12-30 Thread Charles Hope
What is Takahashi analogue to the deflated electron?



On Dec 30, 2011, at 13:21, Daniel Rocha danieldi...@gmail.com wrote:

 Your theory is just too similar to what I imagine that should happen in Phase 
 III that I get confused. You are correct in your stuff, but you don't use 
 many equations, mostly your intuition. So, I get lost reading your papers. 
 
 Right, to be clear. a-e. Just show me where I can find in your papers. I will 
 surely read it, because I just could start to figure out anything from you 
 only when I had a similar idea.
 
 2011/12/30 Horace Heffner hheff...@mtaonline.net
 What part do you not understand:
 
a.  the mechanism of trapping of the post fusion nuclear electron
b.  the low energy state of the post fusion nuclear electron
c.  the mechanism by which the trapped electron absorbs the fusion energy
d.  why the fusion energy is not sufficient to eject the post fusion 
 nuclear electron
e.  the ability of the post fusion trapped nuclear electron to radiate
 
 Just to be clear, I am talking about my theory here, deflation fusion, not 
 any other. I think these things have been described in my articles, but often 
 when I look back I find material that was posted but not included in any 
 article, but which I had assumed was included in an article.   Sometimes it 
 takes me months to find things, and in the interim I think maybe they were 
 figments of my imagination.
 
 
 On Dec 30, 2011, at 8:47 AM, Daniel Rocha wrote:
 
 I didn't understand this part from the intermediate nucleus vicinity in 
 small increments by a trapped electron.  
 
 2011/12/30 Horace Heffner hheff...@mtaonline.net
 
 On Dec 30, 2011, at 7:21 AM, Daniel Rocha wrote:
 
 Oh, nice! That's why he also congratulated you in that report. I didn't go 
 to the talk or take part in the CMNS list, so I cannot know. I am happy 
 that I got to similar conclusions as you did independently. Several people 
 reaching the same conclusions, in similar ways, is a sign of things going 
 into the right direction.
 
 But I am still not sure how to get rid of the gamma rays.
 
 
 You don't have to worry about big gammas if there are none produced.  You 
 don't have to worry about getting rid of gamma rays if they are released 
 from the intermediate nucleus vicinity in small increments by a trapped 
 electron. 
 
 Best regards,
 
 Horace Heffner
 http://www.mtaonline.net/~hheffner/
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 -- 
 Daniel Rocha - RJ
 danieldi...@gmail.com
 


Re: [Vo]:Spontaneous parametric down-conversion (SPDC)

2011-12-29 Thread Charles HOPE
On Tue, Dec 27, 2011 at 1:27 PM, Horace Heffner hheff...@mtaonline.netwrote:


 On Dec 27, 2011, at 9:05 AM, pagnu...@htdconnect.com wrote:

  Horace,

 Thanks for the comment.

 What is needed are some toy models with some simple simulations.
 I will check out your theory.
 Do you believe any new physics is required
 - or does standard QM suffice?
 I am getting pretty boggled by the complexity of it all.

 LP



 I think it is presently not computationally feasible to analyze the
 deflated state using QM. This is due to the extreme relativistic effects
 combined with magnetic effects.



I'm not sure why quantum mechanics couldn't analyze this state, but I don't
believe that the concept of deflation is mainstream physics, is it?

Also, what are your criticisms of Takahashi?


Re: [Vo]:Spontaneous parametric down-conversion (SPDC)

2011-12-29 Thread Charles Hope


On Dec 29, 2011, at 20:09, Horace Heffner hheff...@mtaonline.net wrote:

 
 On Dec 29, 2011, at 3:08 PM, Charles HOPE wrote:
 
 
 
 On Tue, Dec 27, 2011 at 1:27 PM, Horace Heffner hheff...@mtaonline.net 
 wrote:
 
 On Dec 27, 2011, at 9:05 AM, pagnu...@htdconnect.com wrote:
 
 Horace,
 
 Thanks for the comment.
 
 What is needed are some toy models with some simple simulations.
 I will check out your theory.
 Do you believe any new physics is required
 - or does standard QM suffice?
 I am getting pretty boggled by the complexity of it all.
 
 LP
 
 
 I think it is presently not computationally feasible to analyze the deflated 
 state using QM. This is due to the extreme relativistic effects combined 
 with magnetic effects.
 
 
 I'm not sure why quantum mechanics couldn't analyze this state,
 
 I think  ultimately it can.  I know of no analytic method available, other 
 than possibly FEA.   Naudt's relativistic orbital description has gained 
 little acceptance, and neither has Mulenberg's.   The addition of spin 
 coupling magnetic considerations  puts the complexity over the top, as far as 
 I know.  I think the key now is to focus on the gestalt, experimental 
 implications, and hope detailed analysis follows as experiment dictates.  
 Also, as an amateur with limited life expectancy and education, this is the 
 only choice I have. 
 
 
 but I don't believe that the concept of deflation is mainstream physics, is 
 it?
 
 No, deflation fusion is not mainstream, it is my concept.  However, the 
 deflated state itself can be, was, described using conventional physics.


How so? It sounds like an electron level below the ground state, forbidden by 
QM. 



  
 
 
 Also, what are your criticisms of Takahashi?
 
 I see no use in criticizing Takahashi.   I gather it is culturally difficult 
 for him, especially coming from an amateur like me.  No need to be even more 
 socially insensitive than I already am.  


Sorry, I didn't mean criticism of him personally, but his theory. Doesn't it 
have less New Physics, and so should be preferable?




 
 In general, I see the large number of variations of D+D --  intermediate 
 product -- 4He theories, even my common sense X + 2D -- X + 4He nuclear 
 catalysis idea, as failing to describe the most important and mysterious 
 aspects of cold fusion, namely heavy element transmutation without the 
 abundant high energy signatures that should be observed, or even the massive 
 heat that should be observed if conservation of mass-energy is necessary.


I thought I understood you a few days ago to mean that the energy difference 
(23MeV?) typically seen as a gamma ray, here is seen as heat. That was my 
interpretation when you said the heat was the correct quantity to the helium. 


  Any such theory that is adequate to do this can not assume neutrons precede 
 the cold fusion reactions, because neither neutron activation nor radioactive 
 byproducts are observed except in very small amounts that do not correspond 
 to the overall transmutation rate.  I think heavy element transmutation is 
 where the essence of the field lies.  It is unfortunate so much thinking is 
 focused on D+D.  Perhaps it is assumed that since D+D is difficult to 
 explain, that X+H or X+D  is far more difficult or impossible to explain, or 
 even does not exist.  This I think is far from the truth. The most critical 
 impediments are tunneling  distance and tunneling energy.  These are 
 impediments overcome by the shorter distance to lattice atoms from lattice 
 sites, and the net energy gain to be had from the tunneling of deflated state 
 hydrogen.  Heavy element transmutation is far more credible and probable to 
 me than direct hydrogen + hydrogen fusion. Perhaps the latter does not even 
 happen to any significant degree.  The lack of conservation of energy, both 
 on the positive and negative sides, is explained by the trapped electron 
 concept, which is also not conventional thinking, but rather part of the 
 deflation fusion concept.  The trapped electron can kinetically absorb the 
 initial EM pulse of the strong nuclear reaction, radiate in small increments, 
 and be involved in follow-on weak reactions with greatly elevated 
 probabilities due to extended lingering time.  In some cases it may help 
 induce fission.   Understanding the trapping mechanism in the first place, 
 once tunneling is accepted, is high school physics.  Understanding how the 
 electron can escape without a weak reaction, however, takes some 
 understanding of zero point energy. 
 
 My theory is really just common sense.  I am surprised that it is so 
 non-palatable.  I have assumed that is because my writing skills are so bad 
 and because I need pictures.


I would guess people want more math. It's hard to convey over email, but I have 
a solution for that I'll write up this weekend. 




  I guess I shouldn't be surprised at all though.  Many cold fusion theories 
 are only accepted by their authors

Re: [Vo]:We have FPE cells

2011-12-27 Thread Charles Hope
How's that? According to what theory?



On Dec 27, 2011, at 11:01, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:

 Jouni Valkonen wrote:
 
 If I have understood correctly, the correlation is meaningless, because 
 there are orders of magnitude too tiny amounts of helium compared to 
 observed heat.
 
 
 You do not understand correctly. The amounts of helium are right what they 
 should be compared to observed heat. Please read Miles or McKubre.
 
 - Jed
 



Re: [Vo]:We have FPE cells

2011-12-27 Thread Charles Hope
If the helium levels are what they should be compared to the heat, that 
assumes some theory that correlates them. Which theory is that? 



On Dec 27, 2011, at 12:24, Horace Heffner hheff...@mtaonline.net wrote:

 It is not theory, it is experimental result.  Go to:
 
 http://www.lenr-canr.org/
 
 and enter Miles helium and McKubre helium.
 
 
 On Dec 27, 2011, at 8:00 AM, Charles Hope wrote:
 
 How's that? According to what theory?
 
 
 
 On Dec 27, 2011, at 11:01, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Jouni Valkonen wrote:
 
 If I have understood correctly, the correlation is meaningless, because 
 there are orders of magnitude too tiny amounts of helium compared to 
 observed heat.
 
 
 You do not understand correctly. The amounts of helium are right what they 
 should be compared to observed heat. Please read Miles or McKubre.
 
 - Jed
 
 
 
 Best regards,
 
 Horace Heffner
 http://www.mtaonline.net/~hheffner/
 
 
 
 



Re: [Vo]:We have FPE cells

2011-12-27 Thread Charles HOPE
On Tue, Dec 27, 2011 at 4:16 PM, Horace Heffner hheff...@mtaonline.netwrote:



 The conventional D+D fusion reaction, using mass differences, is:

  D + D -- 4He + 23.847 MeV



OK, I get it. Am I correct that the conventional theory says this reaction
doesn't really occur (it's either 3He + n, or 3H + H), or if it did
somehow, the energy would be emitted as gamma ray, and not as heat?


Re: [Vo]:care less

2011-12-27 Thread Charles HOPE
http://incompetech.com/gallimaufry/care_less.html




On Tue, Dec 27, 2011 at 4:57 PM, mix...@bigpond.com wrote:

 In reply to  OrionWorks - Steven Vincent Johnson's message of Tue, 27 Dec
 2011
 10:56:38 -0600:
 Hi,

 Quote:
 I think they will care less about any theoretical arguments that

 This is one of my pet peeves with Americans. ;)

 The expression is couldn't care less not could care less.

 couldn't care less is short for It isn't possible for me to care less
 about
 this subject because I don't care about it at all (and I'm sure you don't
 ;)

 If you could care less, then it means you must care about it to some
 extent as
 it is possible for you to care less than the amount that you now do.

 Regards,

 Robin van Spaandonk

 http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/project.html




-- 
Never did I see a second sun
Never did my skin touch a land of glass
Never did my rifle point but true
But in a land empty of enemies
Waiting for the tick-tick-tick of the want
A uranium angel
Crying “behold,”
This land that knew fire is yours
Taken from Corruption
To begin anew


Re: [Vo]:We have FPE cells

2011-12-27 Thread Charles HOPE
On Tue, Dec 27, 2011 at 12:23 PM, Abd ul-Rahman Lomax
a...@lomaxdesign.comwrote:

 At 01:35 AM 12/27/2011, Charles Hope wrote:


  On Dec 26, 2011, at 22:10, Abd ul-Rahman Lomax a...@lomaxdesign.com
 wrote:

  Then there is that pesky Coulomb barrier. What I found, though, was
 that there was ample opinion among quantum physicists that it was possible
 that the unexplored conditions of condensed matter just might provide some
 pathway around that, some kind of tunneling or alternate reaction. Recent
 work has actually predicted fusion from a physical arrangement of deuterium
 that *might* be present, quite rarely, in highly loaded PdD. That's using,
 apparently, standard quantum mechanics, but that theory is as yet
 unverified.

 Oh? Citation, please?


 Akito Takahashi, multiple publications, going back into the early 1990s.
 For example, see Study on 4D/Tetrahedral Symmetric Condensate Condensation
 Motion by Non-Linear Langevin Equation, Akito Takahashi and Norio
 Yabuuchi, in Low Energy Nuclear Reactions Sourcebook, ed Marwan and Krivit,
 American Chemical Society and Oxford University Press, 2008.

 See also the Storms review, which mentions this work, Status of cold
 fusion (2010), Naturwissenschaften, October 2010. For abstract, see
 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/**pubmed/20838756http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20838756,
 for a preprint, see http://www.lenr-canr.org/**
 acrobat/StormsEstatusofcoa.pdfhttp://www.lenr-canr.org/acrobat/StormsEstatusofcoa.pdf



Thank you, I will have a look at these papers.



 As to the opinion of quantum physicists on the possibility of there being
 unknown effects in the solid state, there was a recent revision of a
 textbook on solid state nuclear models, and it has a section on LENR, and
 it turns out that the author had written something pointing to the lack of
 impossibility back around 1990.



I don't quite follow. Do you mean that he first wrote that it was not
impossible, and then was forced to delete the statement?


Re: [Vo]:We have FPE cells

2011-12-27 Thread Charles Hope
I'm going through Takahashi this week. How could a BEC exist at room 
temperature?




On Dec 27, 2011, at 22:41, Abd ul-Rahman Lomax a...@lomaxdesign.com wrote:

 Bose-Einstein Condensate



Re: [Vo]:We have FPE cells

2011-12-26 Thread Charles Hope


On Dec 26, 2011, at 16:57, Mary Yugo maryyu...@gmail.com wrote:


 With Rossi and Defkalion truly acting and writing like clowns, it's not hard 
 to see why there is no major press coverage or much of anything else going 
 on, a full year after the original announcement and hoopla.   And Aussie 
 Guy's extravagant writing and claims, followed by what amounts to backing 
 down on them, doesn't help either.   This stuff gets less credible and more 
 fanciful every day.


What, you don't believe in these cells that reliably produce heat, built by a 
secret research team unknown to this list and without any relation to anything 
in Jed's encyclopedic library, tested by a company flush in cash but that must 
remain anonymous? Geez, what will it take to convince you of anything?


Re: [Vo]:We have FPE cells

2011-12-26 Thread Charles Hope


On Dec 26, 2011, at 22:10, Abd ul-Rahman Lomax a...@lomaxdesign.com wrote:

 Then there is that pesky Coulomb barrier. What I found, though, was that 
 there was ample opinion among quantum physicists that it was possible that 
 the unexplored conditions of condensed matter just might provide some pathway 
 around that, some kind of tunneling or alternate reaction. Recent work has 
 actually predicted fusion from a physical arrangement of deuterium that 
 *might* be present, quite rarely, in highly loaded PdD. That's using, 
 apparently, standard quantum mechanics, but that theory is as yet unverified.

Oh? Citation, please?


Re: [Vo]:We have FPE cells

2011-12-25 Thread Charles Hope
Have you yet revealed your name, or the name of your company? 



On Dec 25, 2011, at 19:48, Aussie Guy E-Cat aussieguy.e...@gmail.com wrote:

 I support McKubre's Conservation of Miracles or as I put it, Different 
 Dog, Same Leg Action ;)
 
 AG
 
 
 On 12/26/2011 11:04 AM, Terry Blanton wrote:
 On Sun, Dec 25, 2011 at 7:32 PM, Aussie Guy E-Cat
 aussieguy.e...@gmail.com  wrote:
 I can't discuss the cell technology yet. I can say I consider a Ni-H cell as
 a FPE device.
 But it is not.  The reaction is likely unrelated to PdD.
 
 T
 



Re: [Vo]:We have FPE cells

2011-12-25 Thread Charles Hope
A company that's spent $100k+ on RD, but can't let anyone know they're even in 
the industry? I know marketing operations must sometimes be embargoed but 
that's a bit tough to swallow. 

As far as I'm concerned it's more likely that this email account is a shill 
paid by Rossi to spin tales and lend him credence, or just somebody's idea of a 
laugh.   

 

On Dec 25, 2011, at 20:06, Aussie Guy E-Cat aussieguy.e...@gmail.com wrote:

 All will be revealed when we have the positive uni report on our replicant 
 FPE devices. Until then everyone involved wants to keep a low profile, which 
 I trust you understand.
 
 AG
 
 
 On 12/26/2011 11:24 AM, Charles Hope wrote:
 Have you yet revealed your name, or the name of your company?
 
 
 
 On Dec 25, 2011, at 19:48, Aussie Guy E-Cataussieguy.e...@gmail.com  wrote:
 
 I support McKubre's Conservation of Miracles or as I put it, Different 
 Dog, Same Leg Action ;)
 
 AG
 
 
 On 12/26/2011 11:04 AM, Terry Blanton wrote:
 On Sun, Dec 25, 2011 at 7:32 PM, Aussie Guy E-Cat
 aussieguy.e...@gmail.com   wrote:
 I can't discuss the cell technology yet. I can say I consider a Ni-H cell 
 as
 a FPE device.
 But it is not.  The reaction is likely unrelated to PdD.
 
 T
 
 



Re: [Vo]:A new and baffling Rossi said

2011-12-24 Thread Charles Hope
The very first act I'd do is run my own home and office from the technology. In 
winter the windows would be wide open to enjoy the fresh air as we roasted in 
the balmy heat pouring from my heaters that were attached to nothing. That's 
just me. 




On Dec 24, 2011, at 12:57, Mary Yugo maryyu...@gmail.com wrote:

 
 
 On Sat, Dec 24, 2011 at 9:35 AM, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:
 I believe moke up is supposed to be mock-up. I just told Andrea that.
 
 Yes, as I noted, what moke up means is no mystery.  So what does the 
 remainder of the gobbledygook mean?  Is Rossi writing about what he expects 
 Defkalion to do?  What they did?  What?  
 
 Another hallmark of a scam is that the perpetrators act as if the discovery 
 was not as important as it really would be if it were real.  For example, 
 Steorn supposedly discovered a mysterious magnetic interaction that resulted 
 in motors that ran themselves, overcoming friction, and providing free energy 
 beyond that.   But how would a normal person or company act if in possession 
 of such a wonder?  Wouldn't they be extremely active in developing and 
 showing and proving the idea?  Would they not rapidly enlist patent lawyers 
 by the dozens?  Would they not have the concept proven and developed in the 
 largest, best and most effective places?   But none of that ever happened 
 with Steorn.   All they ever did was give demos that were underwhelming and 
 obscure enough so that enthusiasts could interpret them as success.  But they 
 never were.  And there was never any progress and still isn't.  And all their 
 customers, if there were any, were anonymous.  They gave away only one device 
 (I'm not even clear that they really ever did that-- it's sort of a vague 
 recollection at this point) and the recipient said he couldn't make it work. 
 
 Their most prominent point of contact was their forum and what did they do 
 there?  They responded tangentially, incompetently, and weirdly.  At the same 
 time, they attacked their most reasonable critics with sarcasm and threatened 
 to (or actually did) ban them.   They threatened and never brought law suits 
 for libel.   This is precisely Defkalion's behavior currently.  In the area 
 of demonstrations, lectures, and the like, everything with Steorn progressed 
 at a snail pace and none of the activity was appropriate to the uniqueness 
 and grandeur of the discovery, had it been real.  Proponents defended Steorn, 
 postulating that they were concerned about someone stealing the technology.  
 Sound familiar?
 
 This is exactly the pattern Rossi is following.  If Rossi really had a cold 
 fusion reactor on his table top and was using it to provide continuous 
 heating for even one room of his factory, why would he not show it?  Why 
 instead would he have done four hour inadequate demos when he now has a 
 SECOND factory heater that runs CONTINUOUSLY!?   And if the excuse is that he 
 is keeping a low profile, why does he mention these things AT ALL?   
 
 None of this makes sense.  Not Rossi and not Defkalion.  And when things 
 don't add up, you'd better think maybe you're being flummoxed.


Re: [Vo]:Mathematical modeling versus a blacksmith

2011-12-24 Thread Charles Hope
If you wrap the link in these, it should better survive travel. 

On Dec 24, 2011, at 12:21, Mary Yugo maryyu...@gmail.com wrote:

 
 
 On Sat, Dec 24, 2011 at 9:13 AM, Mary Yugo maryyu...@gmail.com wrote:
 
   Sometimes email clients are not kindly to links and interpret/parse them 
 badly!
 
 
 


Re: [Vo]:Mathematical modeling versus a blacksmith

2011-12-24 Thread Charles Hope
Yes, links. Mailers are supposed to preserve links inside the brackets. It's a 
little known fact, but hopefully all the writers of mail software remember it. 



On Dec 24, 2011, at 19:38, Mary Yugo maryyu...@gmail.com wrote:

 
 
 On Sat, Dec 24, 2011 at 3:25 PM, David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:
 I have no trouble with any other posts, only those 2.  I have received many 
 links before with no issues. 
  
 Dave
 
 
 If you send me the bad links, either privately or on the list, I'll rewrite 
 them as tinuyurls.
 
 @Charles: You wrap what in ?  Links or just email addresses.  Never heard 
 of doing that with links.


Re: [Vo]:Mathematical modeling versus a blacksmith

2011-12-23 Thread Charles Hope
Another secret contact! Why can't your friend create a throwaway hotmail 
account like anyone else?



On Dec 23, 2011, at 12:27, Mary Yugo maryyu...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Fri, Dec 23, 2011 at 7:37 AM, David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:
 Hello Mary,
  
 I wonder if you could ask your source to explain the bump in the curve
 
 Done, thanks. 


Re: [Vo]:Miley and other professors can only take money from official sources

2011-12-20 Thread Charles Hope
Tiresome accusations like this ought to be banned from this list. Have you ever 
once seen a paycheck cut for the job of Internet trolling? Really? Really? 
Because it sounds like an awesome part time job, frankly. 




On Dec 19, 2011, at 8:10, Aussie Guy E-Cat aussieguy.e...@gmail.com wrote:

 Cude what does this have to do with FP having been replicated in many labs 
 all over the world? You need to accept that the FPE is real and move on to 
 working out why it happens. Oh BTW you just might apologize to FP for the 
 treatment they received by you and your mates.
 
 Would you please disclose if your income / pay check depends on you not 
 believing the FPE is real and / or working to trash anyone who does? I ask 
 because all you apparently contribute to this list is trashing the FPE.
 
 
 On 12/19/2011 11:23 PM, Joshua Cude wrote:
 
 
 On Sun, Dec 18, 2011 at 8:38 PM, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com 
 mailto:jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:
 
He sure knew what he was getting into. Fleischmann wrote a
lighthearted account of this, quoted in Beaudette's book. It
starts off with Arrhenius in 1883. He was one of the most
important electrochemists in history, like Faraday. He made a
revolutionary discovery. As any student of history would predict,
this led the academic authorities to kick him out of the
university. He was vilified and ridiculed for years and years.
Finally, long after, he won a Nobel prize.
 
 
 You mean like Einstein got kicked out of university? No, because his 
 revolutionary ideas got him kicked *into* university.
 
 
 You mean like Planck's ideas got him kicked out of university? No, because 
 they named one after him.
 
 
 etc.
 
 
 You can't just make shit up to please your audience.
 
 
 I'd like to know of a professor who got kicked out of university for a 
 revolutionary idea. At least one that turned out to be right, and didn't 
 have religious objectors.
 
 
 Because, contrary to your claim, Arrhenius does not provide an example. I 
 admit, my source does not go beyond wikipedia, but according to it, his 
 controversial ideas were presented in his doctoral thesis, so he didn't have 
 a position to be kicked out of. And while there were local skeptics, his 
 degree was granted, if only as 3rd class. Nevertheless, when the 
 dissertation was sent to other European scholars, they came to Sweden trying 
 to recruit him. Doesn't really sound much like cold fusion, does it?
 
 
 The Swedish Academy then awarded him a grant to study with the likes of 
 Boltzmann and van 't Hoff. That doesn't sound like years and years of 
 vilification does it? A few years after his graduation, he was *given* an 
 appointment at the Stockholm university, and was a full professor/chair 
 (rector) about a decade after his PhD. That doesn't sound much like 
 ridicule, does it?
 
 
 It did take almost 20 years to recognize his work with a Nobel prize, but 
 maybe the fact that the prize was not initiated until about 17 years after 
 had something to do with that. He got the 3rd one in chemistry. He was on 
 the Nobel committee from the beginning until his death, and it seems he was 
 not a particularly nice guy himself, arranging awards for his friends, and 
 attempting to deny them to his enemies. He also got involved in racial 
 biology (eugenics) later in his life.
 
That happens so often I am astounded anyone believes the myth that
scientists welcome new ideas.
 
 
 Well, you would not be astounded if you actually paid attention to history, 
 instead of twisting it to rationalize your fervent belief in cold fusion. 
 Right about the same time as the CF announcement, high temperature 
 superconductivity was discovered, and the Nobel prize was awarded -- now get 
 this -- one year later. The discovery had no theory to support it, was 
 unexpected, and yet the discoverers were not dismissed from their positions. 
 Amazing, isn't it. Of course, most Nobel prizes (including Einstein's) take 
 much longer, because it usually takes time for the importance to become 
 manifest, but new discoveries are always celebrated in science, by 
 scientists.
 
 
 As I've said before, the most revolutionary ideas in science in centuries, 
 relativity and QM, were accepted almost as quickly as they could be 
 developed. Because they fit the evidence so perfectly.
 
 
 Just about every evaluation of merit in science, from granting of degrees, 
 to awarding academic or industrial positions, to granting awards, to giving 
 funding, to accepting manuscripts for publication, to any degree of fame and 
 glory, has as its first criterion:
 
 
 *** novelty ***.
 
 
 
 What scientists fear is not new ideas (they crave them), but wrong ideas. 
 Scientists are skeptical; they have to be. Skepticism is a critical filter 
 in guiding research. Without it, they would simply flounder around, like, 
 well, like cold fusion researchers.
 
 
 Of course, that sometimes leads to rejecting good ideas, 

Re: [Vo]:Will the Media Choose the Winners of LENR?

2011-12-16 Thread Charles Hope
What happened to these men and their device? How can a functional generator 
fail to be mass produced all these years later?



On Dec 16, 2011, at 13:15, Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:

 Robert
  
 Ø  Before the courts determine a victor, who will the people identify as 
 the inventor? I believe that it may just come down to branding… So, if 
 Nickel Hydrogen really takes off, who gets the credit?
  
 The first Ni-H device to achieve significant excess energy ( 10 watts 
 continuous) and to run for a year in OU mode, and which was completely 
 verified by NASA, and Haldeman at MIT - was the Thermacore reactor, based on 
 Mills’ theory and invented by Gernert, Shauback, and Ernst.
  
 Those three: Gernert, Shauback, and Ernst  should get full credit IMO – not 
 Piantelli, not Focardi, not Rossi, not even Mills who was technically the 
 first theorist of Ni-H.
  
 These three guys have not only the legal priority date, but also the first 
 replicated, strong, continuous results with gas phase hydrogen. (there was 
 prior subwatt transitory results)
  
 As we have mentioned here before, their reactor got more energy per unit of 
 Nickel surface area than the current Rossi reactor, and had not Thermacore 
 gone through merger and corporate reorganization about this time fame (mid 
 nineties) the inventors would surely have tried “nanometric” nickel – which 
 was Rossi’s main contribution. Note Piantelli was late on ‘nano’ too. Rossi 
 does not even get credit for the “nano” since Mills used Raney nickel – by 
 Mills neglected gas-phase.
  
 Why did Mills steer clear of gas-phase? ANS: probably he saw early on that 
 the reactants became slowly radioactive, and RM had spurned LENR since the 
 beginning.
  
 Thermacore Patent   5,273,635   December 28, 1993 This has the World wide 
 priority date and it has expired.
  
 Inventors: Gernert; Nelson J. (Elizabethtown, PA); Shaubach; Robert M. 
 (Litiz, PA); Ernst; Donald M. (Leola, PA)
  
 Note: Randell Mills is NOT listed as co-inventor.
  
 Jones
  


Re: [Vo]:Bob Park is back!

2011-12-15 Thread Charles Hope
It's not relevant, because his criticism is against innumeracy, which applies 
to such delusions as astrology and homeopathy, but not cold fusion, where the 
most serious advocates are scientists, who certainly know their differential 
equations. 

Why would anyone mention cold fusion in 2011, and raise P  F as the example, 
while neglecting Rossi? That's really bizarre. 




On Dec 15, 2011, at 16:36, Joshua Cude joshua.c...@gmail.com wrote:

 The whole thing is related to pseudoscience and ignorance, and it's all 
 relevant. Here it is:
 
 
 1. HACKS: SHODDY PRESS COVERAGE OF SCIENCE.
 The Leveson Inquiry into the standards and ethics of the UK press, headed 
 by Lord Justice Brian Leveson, was prompted by the News of the World phone-
 hacking scandal (WN 22 Jul 2011). The seamy British tabloid was the top-
 selling English-language newspaper in the world when owner Rupert Murdoch 
 had to close it five months ago after its news-collection methods were 
 exposed. The intense public interest in the sex and drug culture of 
 celebrities is certainly troubling, but the same journalistic standards 
 applied to science news may be more dangerous.  In 1998, for example, 
 Andrew Wakefield, an obscure British gastroenterologist, set off a 
 worldwide vaccination panic when he falsely identified the common MMR 
 vaccination as a cause of autism.  Widely reported by the press, 
 Wakefield's irresponsible assertion led to a precipitous decline in 
 vaccination rate and a corresponding 14-year rise in measles cases.  An 
 editorial in the current issue of Nature (8 Dec 2011) urges scientists 
 to fight back against agenda-driven reporting of science.  Who could 
 disagree? It is, after all, a fight against ignorance. 
 
 2. IGNORANCE: THERE'S PLENTY MORE WHERE THAT CAME FROM.
 A commitment to intellectual openness provides a mechanism for self-
 correction that sets science apart from the unchanging dictates of revealed 
 religion, raising the prospect of transforming Earth into something close 
 to biblical paradise, at least for Homo sapiens.  Directions to this 
 earthly paradise, however, are written in mathematics. In particular, the 
 dialect of scientific progress is differential equations. Unfortunately, 
 few people speak mathematics or have any interest in learning it. In the 
 modern world, the engine of scientific progress is driven by a subset of 
 the human race that speaks mathematics as a second language.  This is not 
 healthy.  Many people, unable to distinguish science from pseudoscience, 
 are duped by crackpots and swindlers who attempt to mimic scientists, and   
 often manage to fool themselves.  How do they do it?
 
 3. LET ME COUNT THE WAYS: PSEUDOSCIENCE IS AN ENORMOUS FIELD  
 There are, I think, many more of them than there are of us. Let me mention 
 just a few of the more notorious:  Stanley Pons and Martin Fleishman, who 
 gave us Cold Fusion in 1989, are the most famous in the Free Energy 
 Category. Even so, physicists had their number in a couple of weeks. More 
 recently (2006) in the same category, the Steorn Company in Dublin gave us 
 Orbo, a classic perpetual motion machine.  So classic it gets reinvented 
 every century or so. Unfortunately Orbo is shy and refuses to perform when 
 anyone’s watching. In the Chicken-Little Category, Devra Davis says the 5 
 billion cell-phone users are toast when we reach the latency period of 
 brain cancer.  Alas, I'm reaching my limit and there are hundreds more on 
 my list. Maybe I'll write a book, or did I already do that?
 
 


[Vo]:CF as a historical phenomenon

2011-12-15 Thread Charles Hope
Are there any examples of pathological science persisting 20 years without 
being properly debunked? Are there any examples of new science remaining on the 
fringe for 20 years before being finally accepted into the mainstream?



Re: [Vo]:Defkalion tells a reader : visit us

2011-12-14 Thread Charles Hope
Ha! No soup for you, Mary! And no, you can't have anybody else's, either. 

I'm sure whoever visits will be sworn to secrecy. To protect the trade secrets, 
of course, because they don't have a patent on what they're about to mass 
produce!





On Dec 14, 2011, at 19:38, Alan J Fletcher a...@well.com wrote:

 M.Y. : Can you mention the name of any well known scientist, engineer, 
 reporter or major company which has visited you, been favorably impressed by 
 the technology you showed them, and with whom we could get confirmation of 
 the visit?
 
 No trade secrets or product specifications are requested -- only an opinion 
 from someone or some company independent of your people and Rossi's-- who has 
 visited your factory and/or lab and has come away with a positive impression.
 
 DKT : You had your chance MaryYugo which you dropped for the sake of your 
 precious anonymity. Why you ask from others to confirm us now?
 Chao
 
 PS Please do not confuse(*) Xanthou street, Glyfada, where our HQ is, with 
 Xanthi town, when we have our main factory and one of our labs. There are 
 just 780km away from each other.
 
 (*)  http://www.mail-archive.com/vortex-l@eskimo.com/msg58942.html
 



Re: [Vo]:Defkalion tells a reader : visit us

2011-12-14 Thread Charles Hope
Yeah, I was wondering if anyone would notice the irony. 



On Dec 14, 2011, at 21:27, Mary Yugo maryyu...@gmail.com wrote:

 
 
 On Wed, Dec 14, 2011 at 5:35 PM, Charles Hope lookslikeiwasri...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
 Ha! No soup for you, Mary! And no, you can't have anybody else's, either.
 
 I'm sure whoever visits will be sworn to secrecy. To protect the trade 
 secrets, of course, because they don't have a patent on what they're about to 
 mass produce!
 
 PS: I just realized you may have been sarcastic.  If so, I apologize but 
 believers really argue like this so I have no idea whether you're serious or 
 joking!


Re: [Vo]:Rossi clarification on Bianchini

2011-12-03 Thread Charles Hope
How else do we know what the instruments said, but by recording them?



On Dec 3, 2011, at 16:06, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:

 Mary Yugo maryyu...@gmail.com wrote:
 
  Ah.  Depends on how much you trust that when Rossi says it's off, it's 
 really off.  Remember the stable! stable!  video. 
 
 I trust the instruments, not Rossi. I do not think it is likely he has 
 developed fake instruments. In any case, I know people who have done these 
 tests with their own instruments, such as the test listed by McKubre in his 
 slides.
 
 - Jed
 


Re: [Vo]:Put your money where your mouth is - for charity

2011-11-28 Thread Charles Hope
Institutions don't like to become irrelevant. They would reverse their policy 
and eat crow before that. They would claim they believed in its possibility all 
along, but were waiting for conclusive evidence. But they wouldn't fade into 
obscurity without making an attempt. 



On Nov 28, 2011, at 22:47, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:

 Daniel Rocha danieldi...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 No, what I mean is the challenge set by the charity campaign. 5 or 10 
 companies is insignificant. If this is true, I expect no less than a nobel 
 prize by 11/30/2013.
 
 There is not a chance in hell the Nobel prize will ever go to anyone 
 associated with cold fusion. Not now, not ever. Too many people on the 
 committees have staked their reputations on it being wrong. They will all 
 have to die, and they are younger than most researchers. Even if I am wrong 
 about that, it will certainly not happen this year.
 
 Gene Mallove said the Nobel prize will fade away and be forgotten because of 
 cold fusion. I think that is a more likely outcome. It will become irrelevant 
 the way the French academy gradually did under the onslaught of the 
 Impressionist's increasing fame. (The Impressionists were much more 
 celebrated than some history books portray. When Monet painted the Gare Saint 
 Lazare in 1877, I have heard the station master cooperated to the extent of 
 delaying trains.
 
 - Jed
 


Re: [Vo]:Krivit provides details of deal Celani offered Rossi and Rossi's rejection of it

2011-11-27 Thread Charles Hope
That's fine, but then Rossi and his believers need to quit complaining or 
expressing alarm when folks see this misdirection and reasonably interpret it 
as evidence of a scam. They should admit that fraud is a rational conclusion.  



On Nov 27, 2011, at 13:05, OrionWorks - Steven Vincent Johnson 
orionwo...@charter.net wrote:

 From Jed:
 
 What would be the advantage to Rossi if he provided a conclusive test?
 
 The advantage would be that people would believe him.  If he did not want
 to be believed, why has he gone through all the demonstrations he has
 done
 thus far with invited guests including press and scientists?
 
 Look, this really is not complicated. He wants to be believed a little,
 by some groups of people, so that he can sell them reactors. He does not
 want to be believed by everyone at this time. Many other inventors such
 as Edison and Patterson did the same thing for the same reasons.
 
 FWIW it appears that Saddam Hussein followed a similar strategy of
 misdirection in regards to weapons of mass destruction. This is based on
 hindsight analysis - when we tried to figure out why we got it so wrong and
 ended up invading Iraq at the needless cost of thousands of lives. However,
 a major difference between Saddam and Rossi was that in Saddam's case he was
 trying to convince neighboring adversaries of the fact that he HAD them (so
 that they would continue to fear him and not invade), while simultaneously
 trying to convince everyone else of the act that he didn't possess any.
 
 I guess one could say that in Saddam's case he got mixed results.
 
 I guess one could say the same about Rossi, but then, the jury is still out
 on that one. ;-)
 
 Be that as it may, it is clear that tactics of misdirection and
 disinformation are used all the time both in covert warfare and in matters
 of covert business strategy. It would appear that any corporation that wants
 to remain in business had better be prepared to play the game.
 
 Regards,
 Steven Vincent Johnson
 www.OrionWorks.com
 www.zazzle.com/orionworks
 



Re: [Vo]:Krivit provides details of deal Celani offered Rossi and Rossi's rejection of it

2011-11-27 Thread Charles Hope
Ok, replace evidence with reasonable indication, but I believe the original 
point remains. 


On Nov 27, 2011, at 16:16, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:

 Charles Hope lookslikeiwasri...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 That's fine, but then Rossi and his believers need to quit complaining or 
 expressing alarm when folks see this misdirection and reasonably interpret it 
 as evidence of a scam.
 
 Misdirection is routinely practiced by most businesses. IBM was famous for it 
 back in the 1970s. For example, they would announce an initiative which 
 they never intended to follow through on, in order to stop a competitor. This 
 is mean spirited, and perhaps unfair, but it is not unethical, and it 
 certainly not a scam. Unless you hold that most corporations are engaged in 
 scams.
 
 I do not think this is evidence. This is your opinion, or your gut feeling 
 of distrust. I do not trust Rossi myself (not to do business with him), but I 
 would never glorify this feeling of mine by calling it evidence of 
 anything. It is intuition. I think evidence should mean a body of facts or 
 information indicating whether a belief or proposition is true or valid. 
 That is, objectively verifiable facts in the real world, such as reports that 
 someone has been scammed (or claims to be), or that Rossi has investors who 
 have not performed independent tests of his equipment. Not your feeling that 
 he might have such investors -- or by gosh wouldn't it be just him to have 
 such investors -- but actual names of investors and a credible report about 
 them.
 
 Feelings should not be ignored. Intuition is often valuable when making a 
 business decision. But intuition and facts are two very different things.
 
 - Jed
 


Re: [Vo]:Lattice Energy LLC comments on Rossi

2011-11-27 Thread Charles Hope
On Nov 26, 2011, at 23:25, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:

 This is an outrage! I object! Larsen called me the textually prolific 
 Internet poster-commenter Mr. Jed Rothwell. Textual, yes. Prolific, sure. 
 But I do not post on the Internet. This is a mailing list, not the Internet.


Joking, yes?




Re: [Vo]:Lattice Energy LLC comments on Rossi

2011-11-27 Thread Charles Hope
I mean, you're joking that vortex isn't the Internet. 



On Nov 27, 2011, at 18:42, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:

 Charles Hope lookslikeiwasri...@gmail.com wrote:
  
 Joking, yes?
 
 No, I believe Larsen is serious. It is hard to judge.
 
 - Jed
 


Re: [Vo]:Krivit provides details of deal Celani offered Rossi and Rossi's rejection of it

2011-11-26 Thread Charles Hope
Rossi is a businessman who wants to make money.  Solid testing would be awesome 
marketing but he doesn't want to attract attention, yet he invites AP reporters 
to observe tests. He doesn't need black box tests because he already has 
customers, and though a satisfied customer is the best marketing available, his 
customers are all sworn to secrecy? He is fine with shoddy demoes because he's 
from the Old School. He just wants to sell devices, but not too many, and yet 
every device sold could be torn apart and duplicated.  He doesn't have a patent 
because the one he filed was intentionally absurd. 

The rationalization required to describe a self consistent narrative out of 
these random, contradictory facts is mind boggling. 


On Nov 26, 2011, at 20:45, Mary Yugo maryyu...@gmail.com wrote:

 Terry, take a moment and google and review the cases of:
 
 Bedini
 Dennis Lee
 Sniffex (and it's $100 million lethal successors such as the ADE651,
 GT200, H3 Tec, HEDD1, AL-6D)
 Perendev
 Mylow
 Jeff Otto
 Carl Tilley
 Aviso
 Any scam of the day at peswiki.com (Sterling cycles them through more
 than once a week)
 and don't forget a detailed study of Steorn
 Any HHO scam, one of which recently killed three participants in a Los
 Angeles suburb and blew up a building
 
 And there are many, many others I could look up but it probably
 wouldn't sway you one bit.
 
 All of the above are scams, scammers, and con men.  Most are investor
 scams rather than product scams.  A few have been caught.  Some are
 convicted felons, like Rossi.  Most don't get caught-- at least not
 for a while and not for every scam.  Some scams are unusually deadly
 -- for example explosive detector scams which killed a dozen people on
 camera in Thailand and possibly hundreds or thousands of anonymous
 people in Iraq and wasted about a hundred million dollars in US aid to
 Iraq.
 
 Do you live in a world of blissful innocence in which everyone is
 honest and you can believe what they say simply because they say it?
 



Re: [Vo]:Leonardo Corporation is a Paper Company

2011-11-26 Thread Charles Hope
On Nov 26, 2011, at 21:07, Craig Haynie cchayniepub...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 
 5) The registered address for the Leonardo Corporation is 8 Town Farm
 Rd, New Boston, NH.
 
 https://www.sos.nh.gov/corporate/soskb/Corp.asp?414253
 
 And there's nothing there.
 


What does this mean? There's no building at the address?



Re: [Vo]:Why Rossi's E-cat is claimed to have a COP of around 6

2011-11-26 Thread Charles Hope


On Nov 26, 2011, at 19:52, Berke Durak berke.du...@gmail.com wrote:
.
 
 Actually, some women will find your statement offensive - are ladies
 precious flowers unable to speak up for themselves and that should be
 protected from vulgar language?


Absolutely. And American ladies never, ever use foul language. We maintain them 
as creatures of proper breeding and pleasant temperament. You really must try 
one some time. They're the envy of all the world. 



Re: [Vo]:Leonardo Corporation is a Paper Company

2011-11-26 Thread Charles Hope


On Nov 26, 2011, at 22:32, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:

 If you are talking about his experimental results, I will stop believing them 
 when:
 
 1. When Mary Yugo finds a stage magician who can tell us how to fake this, 
 even when the machine is opened up to inspection.


Opened up to exactly how much inspection?




Re: [Vo]:Report on Rossi's visit to Boston

2011-11-25 Thread Charles Hope
That's enough with the personal attacks.  

So the client is the American military, who has hired Fioravanti to take 
possession of their goods, and though the branch wants to keep their identity 
secret, it nevertheless insisted on the publicity of the October 28th test?

Am I clear?




On Nov 25, 2011, at 2:49, Marcello Vitale mvit...@ucsbalum.net wrote:

 MY says there is no client. Let me explore the logical consequences of this 
 revelation. Because it's a fact. MY said it, and it fits Occam's razor, which 
 says (I am sure I don't need to remind you) that whatever MY points to as 
 the simplest theory, is indeed true.
 
 Therefore, October 28 was all a big show, with actors and dancers. Yet, Rossi 
 is not turning around and selling retail, or selling stocks. Not making money 
 in any way. Not using the advertisement he paid for, if you will. It's as if 
 a company would launch a huge ad campaign, but not put the advertised product 
 in stores. Buy my ecat! Available 2013! Please, don't send money now! 
 
 Ah, sure, except he is already making money: from those secret investors 
 bound to strict secrecy agreements who paid him in secret money drawn in a 
 secret currency nobody else knows about, which of course would at least 
 explain the financial crisis. Then, why did Rossi have to make that show, 
 anyway? Show the investors he is selling? Then they would start asking for a 
 return on the investment. No, no, the RD money leeches are always just a few 
 weeks away from a salable product. It doesn't compute.
 
 Maybe he just wanted to laugh at us? Or maybe he wanted to make sure MY, 
 certainly his most feared competitor, was kept busy writing about it and not 
 do any work? But if Rossi is a scammer, the competitor of a scammer is 
 another scammer. OK, I guess I'm onto something, I think all the passages in 
 the logical chain do make sense, if one starts from the assumption that Rossi 
 is a scammer, arriving to the conclusion that MY is also a scammer seems 
 almost unavoidable.
 
 Which water car are you selling, MY?
 
 MY theory is the simplest!
 
 :- :-) :-)
 
 On Fri, Nov 25, 2011 at 3:29 AM, Mary Yugo maryyu...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 
 On Thu, Nov 24, 2011 at 6:18 PM, Charles Hope lookslikeiwasri...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
 On Nov 24, 2011, at 19:49, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 
 He claims to have a self-destruct mechanism built in. 
 
 OK.  So you hire some munitions experts who defuse such things for a living.  
 If you buy a megawatt plant, you get 100 tries to disarm the mechanism.  You 
 can try freezing it ... in liquid nitrogen if necessary.  You can examine it 
 first non-destructively any way you want including the examination Rossi 
 forbade Celani to do during a demo.  I can't believe for enough money you 
 couldn't break anything Rossi could put in.  And remember, Rossi is limited 
 by safety issues.
 
  
 Why did he promise to never sell to the military, then turn around to sell to 
 them as his flagship client?
 
 My theory is the simplest:  that there is no client.   
 
  


Re: [Vo]:Report on Rossi's visit to Boston

2011-11-24 Thread Charles Hope
So far, nobody seems to be able to predict Rossi's actions as well as Mary can. 
The rest of us are stumped, but her hypothesis explains the behavior. 



On Nov 24, 2011, at 17:07, Aussie Guy E-Cat aussieguy.e...@gmail.com wrote:

 We don't know that was what went down.
 
 AG
 
 
 On 11/25/2011 8:03 AM, Jed Rothwell wrote:
 A friend wrote to me: Only Andrea could meet with a senator to ask for 
 financial incentives to build a factory and refuse to allow them to test, 
 huh?
 
 - Jed
 
 



Re: [Vo]:Report on Rossi's visit to Boston

2011-11-24 Thread Charles Hope
On Nov 24, 2011, at 19:49, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:

 Mary Yugo maryyu...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 I'm curious.  How do you think Rossi protects his IP when he sells 100 of the 
 E-cats in a batch to an unnamed client.
 
 I answered that question already. Please reread my message.
 


He claims to have a self-destruct mechanism built in. 



 
 There is no smoking gun for fraud.  But Rossi behaves exactly and 
 consistently like free energy scammers who in the past ripped off millions 
 from investors.
 
 He also behaves exactly like a legitimate businessman who does not have a 
 patent, and is having difficulty getting one. Everyone knows it is difficult 
 to get a patent for cold fusion. As far as I know, it is impossible in the 
 U.S.
 


But Rossi says it's not cold fusion. The patent application he tried lacked the 
catalyst. How can he get protection for the catalyst if he doesn't reveal it in 
the application?

Why did he promise to never sell to the military, then turn around to sell to 
them as his flagship client?





Re: [Vo]:Short report on Kullander's cold fusion lecture

2011-11-24 Thread Charles Hope
On Nov 23, 2011, at 23:08, Aussie Guy E-Cat aussieguy.e...@gmail.com wrote:

 Sign a contract for delivery, put your money into Escrow and do what ever 
 Black Box test you wish. What is so hard to understand?
 
 AG


What's hard to understand is how Rossi will prevent you from chopping open your 
new ecat, analyzing the catalyst, and sending it off to china for mass 
production? This would make more sense than using it to heat your tool shed. 


Re: [Vo]:Short report on Kullander's cold fusion lecture

2011-11-24 Thread Charles HOPE
Why would you try to make billions selling knockoff ecats? I don't know,
but the thought might occur to some. He can prevent you from doing this by
selling it to you at a cheap price? And offering tech support?



On Fri, Nov 25, 2011 at 12:23 AM, Aussie Guy E-Cat aussieguy.e...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 Rossi seems confident that will not happen or it will take some time. Why
 would I do that if he sells to me at a good price and provides excellent
 support? Selling price is not everything in deciding who I buy goods from.
 Going for the cheapest price is a well proven way to get ripped off. He is
 quoting public 10 kW system at $0.54 / Watt with a min life of 20 years.
 Wonder what he quotes for 100 MWs?

 AG



 On 11/25/2011 2:59 PM, Charles Hope wrote:

 On Nov 23, 2011, at 23:08, Aussie Guy E-Cataussieguy.e...@gmail.com**
  wrote:

  Sign a contract for delivery, put your money into Escrow and do what
 ever Black Box test you wish. What is so hard to understand?

 AG


 What's hard to understand is how Rossi will prevent you from chopping
 open your new ecat, analyzing the catalyst, and sending it off to china for
 mass production? This would make more sense than using it to heat your tool
 shed.





-- 
Never did I see a second sun
Never did my skin touch a land of glass
Never did my rifle point but true
But in a land empty of enemies
Waiting for the tick-tick-tick of the want
A uranium angel
Crying “behold,”
This land that knew fire is yours
Taken from Corruption
To begin anew


Re: [Vo]: ECAT 1 MW Test Discrepancy

2011-11-23 Thread Charles Hope
I'm finding Cude's responses informative in this thread, and it seems to me 
that he's adequately proven his case now that dispute has been withdrawn. 



On Nov 23, 2011, at 17:49, David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:

 This is getting a bit out of hand.  It does not make sense for me and this 
 poster to continue to state the exact opposites over and over as in the 
 broken record responses that have clogged up the vortex.  I am happy to 
 respond to anyone who has a valid point to make, but I do not see any purpose 
 in repeating the same things.
  
 Yes, I have read your responses(Cude) and find them lacking.   Should I tell 
 you that I find them informative just to make you happy?   I fail to see 
 where you come up with your information, as it does not result in a logical 
 sequence of events or explain ECAT performance.
  
 Your agreements are inconsistent and attempt to cover both sides of the 
 discussion.  Forgive me to say this but you just do not understand what you 
 suggest.
  
 I promise to monitor any valid responses that our members require, but will 
 not continue to repeat myself just for your(Cude) convenience.  That comes 
 close to the definition of insanity.
  
 If you come up with a valid point, I will certainly respond as I intend to 
 seek the truth concerning operation of the ECATs.  I have not, and will not 
 defend positions which are not reasonable and the source of any new 
 information will not be discriminated against, even if he is a confirmed 
 skeptic.
  
 I just want to make one main comment.  The suggestion that the power output 
 is consistent with an average of 70 kW to 470 kW is patently in error.  I 
 might consider a range of 350 kW to 500 +kW because of the suggestion that 
 each ECAT has about 8 liters of volume that can be filled by water under the 
 worst case condition.  Likewise, the upper limit would be increased if the 
 water level is dropping during the test.   The 479 kW average output power 
 calculation obtained by the engineer is acceptable to me and he is an expert 
 at his art.
  
 Dave
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Joshua Cude joshua.c...@gmail.com
 To: vortex-l vortex-l@eskimo.com
 Sent: Wed, Nov 23, 2011 4:11 pm
 Subject: Re: [Vo]: ECAT 1 MW Test Discrepancy
 
 
 
 On Wed, Nov 23, 2011 at 2:19 PM, David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:
 I have reviewed the two responses by this poster to my hypothesis and it is 
 clear that these responses do not represent reality.  The poster is convinced 
 that Rossi is scamming and there is no level of proof that will be accepted 
 otherwise.
 
 You expressed your conviction that Rossi was right before you even 
 considered my arguments, so *you* clearly  started with a conclusion. 
 Considering what you said, it is clear that there is no level of proof that 
 will convince you that Rossi's demos (including the last one) do not need 
 nuclear reactions to explain them.
  
 Show me real evidence and I will accept it.  Otherwise, it is not going to 
 matter.
 
 The fact is that the reported measurements are consistent with power output 
 (average) from 70 kW to 470 kW, and if you accept partially filled ecats, 
 from 9 kW to 470 kW. Lower power is more plausible given the slow warm-up 
 period.
  
 Saying this over and over does not make it true.  The evidence is 
 overwhelmingly against this.
  
   I stand by all of the statements that I made and all of the evidence 
 supports them. 
 
 Again, the best you can say is that it is consistent with them. Your 
 description is *not* required by the evidence. That's a big difference. One 
 you clearly failed to absorb in your education.
  
 That sounds like an insult.  Try to improve your tone.
 
 There is no virtually no evidence to support the water continues through 
 without vaporization position. 
 
 Not without vaporization. Without *significant* vaporization. Another huge 
 difference because of the ratio of 1700 between the volumes. A tiny bit of 
 vaporization means the output is almost all gas by volume. That's another 
 point you don't seem to understand.
  
 You never explain the trap.  Why is this so difficult for you to grasp?
 I tried to make this system fit in the beginning, but found many holes that 
 are left unanswered.
 
 All the ones you have mentioned, I have countered.
  
 Sorry, but this is just not true.  None have been countered effectively.
  
   The valve being closed issue is false, since the valve is after the trap. 
 
 I've been harping on the valve for days, and now finally you give your 
 counter-argument? And this is it? Did you even look at the video? There are 
 2 valves. One leading to the heat exchanger, which is open. And one leading 
 to the trap, which is clearly closed at 3:00.
  
 Please review the video.  The trap is between the ECAT system and the closed 
 valve.  Closing the valve will stop the high speed vapor you suggest that 
 carries the water past.  Water can flow down hill. 
 
 What would keep water 

Re: [Vo]:its been great

2011-11-21 Thread Charles Hope
I've tossed a few posters into my filter, generally for an excess of unamusing 
puns, but I never understood the theory of compounding the annoyance with long 
announcements of same. 



On Nov 21, 2011, at 0:56, Jouni Valkonen jounivalko...@gmail.com wrote:

 Apparently, Mary is less pathological case than Cude, but problem is that she 
 is a perpetual motion machine that goes endlessly onwards and onwards without 
 need for input energy (food). Like she has moral oblication to protect poor 
 and consideration inable investors from getting cheated.
 
 It would be nice if we could introduce her and other hyperactive posters a 
 special rule that there is a two post per day limit for messages that contain 
 quoted material and after the quota is exceeded there should be required 24 
 hour delay before reply can be sent. This would effectively prevent inboxes 
 to overflow without limiting too much discussion. Actually, it should enhance 
 the quality of discussion, because people would think more carefully what is 
 relavant to say.
 
 For filtering people, usually it is plausible to filter not just messages 
 that come from the address jounivalko...@gmail.com, but also messages where 
 the body contain a phrase Jouni Valkonen or email address. This way also 
 replies will get filtered.
 
 Also with filtering with Gmail, instead of diverting them into thrash bin, it 
 would be better to mark them as read automatically. This way it is easy to 
 ignore them in threads, but if there are new topics posted they still appear 
 in the inbox and will get noted, although not necessarily read.
 
 —Jouni
 
 Ps. After Mary came here I have in my inbox more than 70 threads that contain 
 unread messages. I would say that there is definitely a problem with posting 
 frequency.
 
 
 On Nov 21, 2011 1:33 AM, Daniel Rocha danieldi...@gmail.com wrote:
 Jed, that is NOT possible. He would still see people answering the same 
 things over and over again. What makes MY annoying is not the arguments, but 
 the repetition. But the repetition is not only hers, it is also from whoever 
 answer. So, it won't work just blocking. 
 
 2011/11/20 Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com
 Esa Ruoho esaru...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 you guys had a real nice list going. then mary yugo joined. im out of here.
 
 Why don't you just block out Mary Yugo's message? Problem solved.
 
 I'll do that in a week or so, and stop responding.
 
 - Jed
 
 
 
 
 -- 
 Daniel Rocha - RJ
 danieldi...@gmail.com
 


Re: [Vo]:E-Cat guy: Hire a local HVAC engineering company!

2011-11-20 Thread Charles Hope


On Nov 20, 2011, at 13:05, Mary Yugo maryyu...@gmail.com wrote:


 
 
 And why in the world would you trust people who install large industrial 
 devices?  In my experience they have a lot of practical knowledge on how to 
 do their jobs according to instructions and protocols but not the formal 
 education to understand the reasons.  Rossi's device isn't an ordinary boiler 
 for goodness' sake!  It's a flippin' NUCLEAR FUSION REACTOR with claims of 
 awesome power capabilities.  I wouldn't let an HVAC engineer near it.



Really? What better way to apply best practices in standard, practical  
calorimetry?


Re: [Vo]:its been great

2011-11-20 Thread Charles Hope


On Nov 20, 2011, at 18:45, Akira Shirakawa shirakawa.ak...@gmail.com wrote:

 On 2011-11-21 00:33, Daniel Rocha wrote:
 Jed, that is NOT possible. He would still see people answering the same
 things over and over again. What makes MY annoying is not the arguments,
 but the repetition. But the repetition is not only hers, it is also from
 whoever answer. So, it won't work just blocking.
 
 With Mozilla Thunderbird (an external email client) it's possible. It can 
 kill completely threads and thread *branches* created by filtered users, if 
 desired. You would however still see messages from the many users on vortex-l 
 who appear to reply in a non-standard manner, splitting threads in multiple 
 pieces.
 
 (that's very annoying in my opinion, together with HTML emails. The use of 
 properly configured email clients should be among group rules)
 

Agreed. Also, new threads should not be renamed replies to other threads, 
because some smart email clients are not fooled by subject changes, and the new 
thread is hidden in the original. 

Incidentally, I find the list much more valuable with the contrasting 
contributions from Yugo, Cude, and Lomax, than when it becomes an echo chamber 
of agreement. 



Re: [Vo]:How should I demonstrate LENR, if I can reproduce it?

2011-11-19 Thread Charles Hope
Rossi said he'd sell to anybody except the military. 

On Nov 19, 2011, at 23:17, Aussie Guy E-Cat aussieguy.e...@gmail.com wrote:

 On 11/20/2011 2:30 PM, Mary Yugo wrote:
 What Rossi could do would be twofold.  First, ally himself with some deep 
 pockets.
 
 Deep pockets? How much deeper can you get but the military? Who Rossi now 
 claims bought the first and the next 13 x 1 MW E-Cat plants. 



Re: [Vo]:How should I demonstrate LENR, if I can reproduce it?

2011-11-19 Thread Charles Hope


On Nov 20, 2011, at 0:52, David Roberson dlrober...@aol.com wrote:

 
 I made a good faith effort to explain the system to one of them to no avail.  
 That particular one refused to discuss the operation of Rossi's 1 MW system 
 in details point by point. 
 It is apparent that he realized that his argument was being dismissed and ran 
 for cover.  Maybe he was afraid that he would have to accept the fact that 
 Rossi's test was valid
 once his misconceptions were revealed.


That's not what I saw. I saw you start with insults,  then begin rational 
dialogue, get frustrated, and switch back to the insults. You didn't give the 
scientific discussion with Cude more than two days. 

I would like to see more scientific discussion. 
 

And also less dumb speculation about folks being paid agents of Big Oil. 

Re: [Vo]: UK's DECC Monitoring the sector (LENR)

2011-11-18 Thread Charles Hope
Moving into acceptance? Seems to me that governments are taking the same policy 
of Cude, Yugo, and Park. 





On Nov 18, 2011, at 0:09, Craig Brown cr...@overunity.co wrote:

 I never said they DID believe Rossi. This has nothing to do with Rossi, this 
 sector refers to LENR in general where Rossi is only one of a growing number 
 of people with interesting and commercially useful results.
 
 Mary, you can try and spin their statement any way you like, but it's very 
 clear. Their Chief Scientific Advisor has just admittted that it is 
 appropriate for DECC to maintain a watch on this sector. Their words, not 
 mine. If you are having difficulty in accepting the fact that LENR is now 
 moving slowly into mainstream acceptance by gov agencies then just say so.
 
 
  Original Message 
 Subject: Re: [Vo]: UK's DECC Monitoring the sector (LENR)
 From: Mary Yugo maryyu...@gmail.com
 Date: Fri, November 18, 2011 2:53 pm
 To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
 
 
 
 On Thu, Nov 17, 2011 at 8:46 PM, Craig Brown cr...@overunity.co wrote:
 I recently contacted DECC (UK equivalent of DoE) to get their view on what 
 they thought about the ecat, and to see if they had even heard of it.  I got 
 quite an interesting reply. Trigger for further action is an interesting 
 phrase.
 
 
 DECC is aware of this alleged power source: the DECC CSA, David MacKay FRS, 
 has read some of the literature and has met Sven Kulander, who has reviewed 
 an experiment and whose report is on the Defkalion website. The CSA's 
 judgment is that it is appropriate for DECC to maintain a watch on this 
 sector, with the key trigger for further action being the publication of the 
 work in a reputable peer-refereed journal, including full details so that 
 academic scientists can replicate the results. SNIP
 
 In other words, they don't believe Rossi either, on the evidence that he's 
 provided.


Re: [Vo]:Stop Destroying Keyboards

2011-11-15 Thread Charles Hope


On Nov 15, 2011, at 11:17, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:

 Many things about Rossi make no sense. He is not a predictable person, and 
 not easy to understand. His motivations are obscure. He is complicated. His 
 business practices seem risky and ineffective to me. He does many things that 
 make him look bad, as I have often pointed out.


Yes, his behavior is highly irrational. 

I have had conversations with schizophrenics, asking questions and agreeing 
with everything they say in order to understand their worldview. It doesn't 
work. Instead of converging upon a consistent although fantastic world, instead 
they take me on a ride, constantly introducing new ideas, contradicting 
previous ones, but they never notice the contradictions. There's no there 
there. 


Re: [Vo]:Let Rossi Be Rossi?

2011-11-14 Thread Charles Hope
Granted that Rossi is producing anomalous heat, nevertheless absolutely 
everything else about this story stinks to high heaven. The conundrum which 
nobody can decipher is why someone with a real effect, or a scammer, would 
operate in such a bizarre manner. The only conclusion left is that the effect 
is real and Rossi is insane. 




Sent from my iPhone. 

On Nov 14, 2011, at 10:05, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:

 This thread is full of strawman arguments. No one is defending Rossi's 
 behavior, least of all me. We are saying:
 
 His claims can be evaluated independently of his behavior, based strictly on 
 the laws of physics. This is true even though his experimental techniques are 
 sloppy.
 
 His business decisions are his business, not anyone else's. His business 
 decisions have nothing to do with his claims.
 
 - Jed
 



Re: [Vo]:a modest proposal

2011-11-14 Thread Charles Hope

On Nov 14, 2011, at 14:04, Mary Yugo maryyu...@gmail.com wrote:
  My working theory on why he behaves that way is that he's scamming. 



There are two problems with that. 

He's shifty and does not inspire confidence. 

He's not taking all the money he's being offered. 



Re: [Vo]:Let Rossi Be Rossi?

2011-11-14 Thread Charles Hope


On Nov 14, 2011, at 20:12, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:

 Charles Hope lookslikeiwasri...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 
 Rossi can be devious, but I have not seen any evidence that he lies about 
 engineering data. 

Except that you wrote 

 Mind you, the list of his statements we compiled includes some diametrically 
 opposite assertions:
 
 http://www.peswiki.com/index.php/Directory:Andrea_A._Rossi_Cold_Fusion_Generator:Rossi%27s_Hints


Now, if he wants to maintain secrecy, a reasonable goal, why incessantly answer 
blog questions to the point where misdirection is then needed?





  
 The only conclusion left is that the effect is real and Rossi is insane.
 
 He does not seem insane to me. I have met many others like him. He is 
 suffering from the Inventor's Disease, but not as badly as some.
 
 - Jed


You have said his psychology is completely irrelevant, but his behavior is not 
consistent with that of a pure scientist in pursuit of accuracy, a businessman 
maximizing his return, a con man maximizing his take, a secretive engineer, a 
publicity whore seeking attention. or anything. There is no story that can 
explain his random contradictory behavior, which is why the theories still fly 
around. 
 


Re: [Vo]:Faith!

2011-11-02 Thread Charles Hope
I'm interested in your criticisms of mainstream physics. Is there widespread 
agreement with your opinions on, say, QED? If not, what is preventing 
mainstream physicists from seeing it?



Sent from my iPhone. 

On Nov 1, 2011, at 4:25, Danny Ross Lunsford antimatte...@yahoo.com wrote:

 My strongest reason for believing that Rossi is on the up and up - plain old 
 faith.
 
 1) QCD, the theory of the strong interaction that controls how protons and 
 neutrons interact, is a beautiful structure that is just about completely 
 useless. Almost nothing can be calculated with it. I don't mean a restricted 
 number of things - I mean just about nothing. Not only is it completely 
 sterile computationally, it is also absolutely useless as a heuristic 
 phenomenology to pave the way forward, the way the London theory of 
 superconductivity paved the way for the real deal of the 
 Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer theory.
 
 2) Neutrino physics is in complete disarray. The discovery of oscillations 
 and the failure to find the Higgs boson (something many of us thought would 
 never be found years ago) has thrown even the successful part of the standard 
 model, the electroweak sector, into chaos.
 
 3) Even bare QED, the quantum version of electrodynamics, is plagued with 
 mathematical ambiguities  that caused both Dirac and Feynman to ultimately 
 reject it. Despite all the hubris about calculations to 8 decimal places, as 
 a theory it is hopelessly flawed by reliance on ambiguous mathematics and 
 poorly defined physical concepts. As Dirac said, one ignore a quantity 
 because it is small, not because it is infinite!
 
 In other words, the standard model, for all its publicity, is a ramshackle of 
 phenomenology that borrowed shall we say, its main tools from the theory of 
 superconductivity and pushed them way beyond the brink of reasonableness. 
 Even the fundamental idea, gauge invariance, does not last past square 1, and 
 one must sacrifice it to have a short range force.
 
 Now consider the situation in 1820, when Faraday was working. Almost nothing 
 was known about the true nature of light, there was no cooperative theory of 
 electricity and magnetism, much less one that united them is a single scheme 
 - that would have to wait until 1865. But Faraday forged ahead with his 
 experiments. He discovered that a current loop in the presence of a magnet 
 experienced a torque - the first clue to their actual relationship. Within a 
 decade, people were making electric motors, completely without any real 
 understanding of what was going on! Yet that did not stop people from 
 tinkering and inventing and moving forward. It was the utility of the 
 phenomenon that drove the science, not the other way around! And of course 
 who in his right mind would have imagined the key to their relationship was 
 nothing but light itself? That had to wait for a epochal genius, Maxwell.
 
 Friends, there are no epochal geniuses around. But we do have limited 
 knowledge - a great deal of phenomenology - about the nucleus, and a 
 bandy-legged, cross-eyed theory that at least makes up a sort-of consistent 
 whole. The LENR researchers of today are like Faraday - Rossi is like the 
 guys who made motors (and got rich!) - we wait for the Maxwell to cut the 
 Gordian knot. But for the knot to be cut - you first have to believe it is 
 possible. You have to have faith!
 
 Did we really think we would go down into the mud again without ever making 
 any progress? Did we really imagine it was all over? Here's a brand new 
 phenomenon, exactly when one was desperately needed! both in the practical 
 world and in the abstract world of pure research. I could not  imagine that 
 we would all just turn out the lights, turn off our  computers, shut down our 
 universities and libraries, dismantle their buildings for firewood, and 
 simply return to the dark ages. I had faith that some day, something new 
 would happen. I am painfully aware of my own limitations, but that is exactly 
 why I'm allowed to believe, when the self-satisfied and arrogant skeptic can 
 only stew in his own cynicism.
 
 It's faith that tells me, more than 1000 experts and gauges, that this is 
 real.
 
 -drl
 
 --
 I write a little. I erase a lot. - Chopin
 


Re: [Vo]:Hey, it didn't blow up! And by the way, there does seem to be a permit.

2011-10-28 Thread Charles Hope
Jed, in your opinion, why does Rossi bother with these demoes, if they don't 
impress fence sitters, and he doesn't need new investors?



Sent from my iPhone. 

On Oct 28, 2011, at 22:37, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:

 I wrote:
 
 This test has been a colossal disappointment.
 
 I know Rossi pretty well by now, so I was expecting something like this. 
 Given who Rossi is and how he thinks, this wasn't a colossal disappointment.
 
 Also, this was not a colossal disappointment to me because, hey, it did not 
 blow up. As readers here know, I was seriously worried the damn thing might 
 explode or irradiate the audience. I am relieved that nothing like that 
 happened. It seemed to work at 1/2 of nameplate power. For a reactor they 
 just finished building, that's fantastic. That is as good as 1 MW.
 
 Rossi is much braver than I am, or much more foolhardy, or both.
 
 As you hear in this video, I am not the only one who is worried about 
 radiation and other dangers. So are the Italian authorities, as well they 
 should be:
 
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rLAdGduQ50A
 
 Rossi says here that they issued some sort of conditional permit, with 
 restrictions. That is the sort of thing you would expect for an experimental 
 device. That sounds plausible. It is what I would expect a responsible 
 government official to issue.
 
 I still think it was much too big a reactor, and I still think the test 
 schedule was too fast. But evidently Rossi and the Italian officials share 
 some of my concerns about safety and that's good.
 
 I predicted that a major company such as GE or Mitsubishi would want to get 
 involved in such risky tests. Perhaps I was wrong and this was a big company. 
 But if it was an up-and-coming profitable, risk-taking place such as 
 Manutencoop, that may be the kind of thing they would get into. Back in the 
 go-go late 1960s, companies such as Data General used to get involved in 
 risky start-up technology. According to Soul of a New Machine there were 
 rumors that Data General was involved in some actual physical risk and 
 possibly criminal behavior such as burning down the buildings of rival 
 companies.
 
 - Jed
 


Re: [Vo]:Rossi's Customer is not who is?

2011-10-22 Thread Charles Hope
Maybe there was an acquisition since the arrangement was made. 



Sent from my iPhone. 

On Oct 22, 2011, at 12:29, Peter Gluck peter.gl...@gmail.com wrote:

 If somebody can understand this. please explain:
 
 Mattia Battistich
 October 22nd, 2011 at 9:59 AM
 Dear Dr. Rossi,
 1) A few weeks ago I remember reading a quote on you saying that by mid 
 October, a week before the test scheduled for the 28th, you would have 
 revealed the location where your first 1MW plant customer comes from, and 
 that by then it would clear to everybody who it was. Considering less then a 
 week separates us from the 28th are you still inclined to do so?
 
 
 
 Andrea Rossi
 October 22nd, 2011 at 10:38 AM
 Dear Mattia Battistich:
 1- USA; is an Entity that wants not to be disclosed, for its particularity; 
 this does not depend from me, the Customer is not the same we supposed would 
 have been. As Eraclitus wrote “…all changes, and the water flowing along a 
 river is never the same…”
 
 I awfully regret interrupting my philosophy studies many years ago.
 I know reallly a lot of Companies, but no one with the above
 characteristics.
 
 -- 
 Dr. Peter Gluck
 Cluj, Romania
 http://egooutpeters.blogspot.com
 


Re: [Vo]:The style is the man himself.

2011-10-17 Thread Charles Hope
I'm just interested in what kind of unpowered system can use insulation to 
increase its temperature after the power has been shut off. 

It seems to me Jed has a point. 



Sent from my iPhone. 

On Oct 17, 2011, at 21:37, Robert Leguillon robert.leguil...@hotmail.com 
wrote:

 Mr. Rothwell never attacked me personally. He merely labeled all remaining 
 skeptics as ignorant/blind/foolish/etc. I think that there is still room to 
 question the results, and I'm certainly not the only one. I think that the ad 
 hominems can stifle open communication, and I thought that they did not have 
 place here.
 Now, in questioning the thermocouples, I'm apparently violating the laws of 
 physics and
 without a 7th grade education. A public forum should be a safe environment 
 from ad hominems, but maybe I misunderstood. 
 I may not have a degree in Japanese, but I was studying quantum mechanics 
 at Fermilab while still in high school.  Nevertheless, I'll take a back seat, 
 or get out of the kitchen if this is how you guys cook.
 
 Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Stephen A. Lawrence sa...@pobox.com wrote:
 
 
 
 
 On 11-10-17 03:50 PM, OrionWorks - Steven V Johnson wrote:
 
 Robert,
 
 You state:
 
 You [Mr. Rothwell] may disagree, and now be 100% convinced, but it's your
 personal attacks that are troubling.
 
 Where has Mr. Rothwell attacked you personally?
 
 
 Well, if Robert is claiming that there was no energy generated, then the
 item from Jed which he quoted would apply to him, and that sure sounds like
 an ad hominem to me:
 
 Skepics who claim that ... there was no energy generated ... are ignorant.
 They lack 7th grade knowledge of physics.
 
 That is not an attack on the arguments.  That is an attack on the skeptics,
 themselves.  Jed has personally attacked /all/ Rossi skeptics, it would
 seem.
 
 
 It would not be an attack on Robert if Robert is, in fact, in the 7th grade.
 He might be. Or his science education may have ended then.
 
 There are many people who have no knowledge of science beyond junior high
 levels. I have met some high and mighty Wall Street investment bankers
 interested in cold fusion who would not know the Second Law of
 Thermodynamics if it bit them on the butt.
 
 Such people are common in the U.S., and always have been. Read Mark Twain
 and you will see.
 
 Being ill-educated it not dishonorable. What is dishonorable is to refuse to
 educate yourself more; to challenge your assumptions; or to perform a simple
 test in the kitchen to see what happens to hot water in a poorly insulated
 metal vessel in 4 hours.
 
 I am pretty sure this is junior high level material because somewhere I have
 a junior high physics textbook, in Japanese. I recall this kind of thing was
 covered in it. Granted, their classes tend to be more advanced than ours.
 Anyway, I can't find it.
 
 - Jed



Re: [Vo]:More drama: open letter to Christos Stemmenos from Defkalion GT

2011-10-14 Thread Charles Hope
I'm sorry, but how does Stremmenos' letter ruin Rossi's chances of obtaining 
damages?

Sent from my iPhone. 

On Oct 13, 2011, at 15:42, Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:

 Thanks, Akira ... More drama indeed! Move over, James Bond there is new 
 poker-faced gambler in town.
 
 This is looking almost like financial suicide on Rossi's part (assuming DGT 
 is not bluffing). AR has made all the wrong strategic moves and with 
 mind-boggling naiveté. In contrast, the low key and well-worded response from 
 DGT is superbly crafted from a legal standpoint, whereas everything coming 
 from the Rossi camp is self-inflicted damage.
 
 Could Stemmenos end up being a double-agent or plant from Defkalion, whose 
 main function has been to cleverly and completely eliminate any chance of 
 Rossi obtaining damages for breach of contract? If so, Stemmenos has 
 performed admirably.
 
 It is easily possible that DGT may NOT have had money problems after all, but 
 nevertheless desperately wanted to wiggle their way out of an expensive 100 
 million Euro contract and when Rossi could not meet a milestone, they say an 
 opening. Apparently DGT also discovered an alternative technology to E-Cat - 
 and they accomplished this in a most impressive fashion by tricking Rossi 
 into believing that he still had the upper hand, since he had never disclosed 
 the secret ... which may not have been so valuable, after all. 
 
 Apparently DGT discovered either the secret catalyst itself, or more likely a 
 substitute, and on their own initiative; and Rossi refuses to understand 
 this. Rossi has been played. He apparently even wants to hire away the 
 scientist who found the alternative process. Pity.
 
 IMO - the past several months may have cost Rossi most of the value of 
 whatever he had to begin with, in terms of value of IP - even if we discount 
 the ludicrous and unenforceable patent.  He has been set-up in such an 
 artistic fashion by his opponents that he is still in the dark just as Act 
 111 is nearly complete ... and miraculously does not realize that he (EFA, 
 Leonardo, Ampenergo, etc) and NOT his former associates violated the terms of 
 the agreement - and therefore cannot collect either Royalties or the huge 
 lump sum payment, while at the same time allowing DGT to compete worldwide 
 (instead of just that valuable Balkan market :)
 
 ... and now we learn DGT may compete with what is claimed to be a superior 
 product. Plus, DGT can now redirect that 100 million Euro into a factory and 
 distribution network of their own. They have seem to have pulled off a 
 real-life Casino Royale.
 
 Of course, this conclusion is valid only if DGT has indeed duplicated the 
 technology successfully. 
 
 Given the circumstances, it seems at least arguable that they have done this, 
 and that Stemmenos may have been their ace-in-the-hole, so to speak.
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Akira Shirakawa 
 A translation has been posted today on 22passi instead:
 
 http://22passi.blogspot.com/2011/10/stremmenos-stance-on-defkalion-gts-10.html
 
 Cheers,
 S.A.
 
 
 



Re: [Vo]:I love Obama, great speach on jobs, patents too

2011-09-10 Thread Charles Hope
One can make the case that displaced old workers can't be retrained, and so 
should be kept alive on transfer payments, but their children should be able to 
take part in the new economy, as software workers, so there should never be a 
permanently displaced class. 

Sent from my iPhone. 

On Sep 10, 2011, at 10:14, OrionWorks - Steven Vincent Johnson 
orionwo...@charter.net wrote:

 From Harry Veeder
 
  
 
  Actually, creating jobs is rather irrelevant goal, because it is more
 
  important to create automation and robots who does the productive
 
  work. Of course, creating automation, does return into innovation.
 
  
 
  As the wealth is acquired from automation, then it is possible to
 
  create jobs into service sector by boosting the purchasing power of
 
  median people by introducing basic income.
 
  
 
 I disagree. Vehemently so. Perhaps I should actually say that the above 
 premise misses an important point that I will attempt to clarify – as I see 
 it.
 
  
 
 It is inevitable that outsourcing, which is then permanently followed by 
 automation  robotics is what is in store for us, what the above comment 
 completely misses is how will we go about employing increasing numbers of 
 individuals who have been misplaced as a result of their traditional jobs 
 having been outsourced and eventually taken over by automation and robotics.
 
  
 
 A subtle point the above premise may have gotten completely wrong is the fact 
 that as automation takes over more and more jobs in traditional manufacturing 
 sectors it is NOT necessarily true that these misplaced workers will end up 
 being reemployed in various service sector areas of the economy. The problem 
 many politicians seem oblivious to and subsequently refuse to acknowledge to 
 their constituents is the fact that increasing numbers of service sector jobs 
 are ALSO ending up being automated. This is happening because it is far 
 cheaper for companies providing various services to automate rather than to 
 continue employing troublesome people who need expensive health insurance and 
 other bennies like unions that management hates. For example, the last time 
 I called my cable company to complain about the fact that my internet service 
 was down I never talked to a human. The ENTIRE phone conversation was 
 handled through a combination of voice recognition and recorded responses 
 that guided me step-by-step through a complex process that helped me restore 
 internet access. At my place of employment, more and more individuals we 
 employ for computer related work are contractors hired from India and China – 
 (Outsourcing). Sooner or later many of these “outsourced” jobs will end  up 
 being automated as well. Other service sectors that one might think would be 
 impervious to the ravages of automation are also in danger of being replaced, 
 such as the lawyer industry. Specialized search engines can take over many 
 tasks previously employed by lawyers whose job had been to search text for 
 various rulings.
 
  
 
 National wealth will NOT be created if the ONLY thing we see happen to our 
 nation is the inevitable implementation of more and more automation. All that 
 will produce is increasing numbers of individuals thrown out of job market 
 where they may remain permanently unemployed or underemployed as they 
 desperately take up the only kinds of jobs they can find, such as flipping 
 burgers at McDonalds or manning cash registers at Wall Mart or Office Depot. 
 Time after time, amount of income these displaced workers end up earning 
 after being reemployed is far less than what they were previously earning, 
 and this inevitably results in the fact that they will not earn enough income 
 to be able to afford the very fruits that automation is supposed to offer 
 them.
 
  
 
 This issue has been going on for years and it is insidious. It is a major 
 contributing factor to our current economic woes. It is vividly described in 
 detail by author, Martin Ford in his book The Lights in the Tunnel which 
 Mr. Rothwell originally brought to our attention not long ago.
 
  
 
 http://www.thelightsinthetunnel.com/
 
  
 
 It's worth reading.
 
  
 
 As a nation, as a world, we will have to devise ways in which to both evenly 
 and fairly redistribute income (currency) amongst the population regardless 
 of whether these individual are employed in the traditional sense or not. Our 
 economies are consumer based. This means that if too many remain unemployed 
 they cannot consume anything, and our economy tanks permanently. It will make 
 no difference if automation produces everything we need if too many 
 individuals have no means at their disposal in which to earn a decent income 
 in which to earn goods and services that end up being created via through 
 automation.
 
  
 
 Regards,
 
 Steven Vincent Johnson
 
 www.OrionWorks.com
 
 www.zazzle.com/orionworks


Re: [Vo]:Greek press report: Defkalion has not applied for license or safety testing

2011-09-03 Thread Charles Hope
If I understand the translation, this means that Defkalion never requested 
permission to build a plant where it was thought they would. How does this 
reflect poorly upon Rossi?

Sent from my iPhone. 

On Sep 3, 2011, at 10:56, Susan Gipp susan.g...@gmail.com wrote:

 Another evidenche that the whole e-cat story is built over a pile of lies
 How long Rossi will last with this joke ?
 
 2011/9/3 Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com
 See:
 
 http://www.xanthipress.gr/eidiseis/politiki/9154-xynidis-kontos-aitisi-ergostasio-syntixi-defkalion-.html
 
 
 A translation sent to me by someone (maybe done by Google):
 
 
 No applications for plant in Xanthi
 
 With new negative letters answered, as expected, the question submitted by 
 the MP [member of parliament?  M. Y.] Xanthi New Republic to 
 competentministers on the issue of environmental impacts from the possible 
 establishment of Xanthi plant devices producing energy from fusion of 
 hydrogen-nickel.
 
 After the replies of the Ministry of Finance to the Ministry of Environment 
 and the Ministry of Development responded to Members of the Southwest there 
 is filed an application for the company Defkalion for this investment and 
 therefore can not assess the potential environmental burden .   
 
 Indeed the response of the Ministry of Development, signed by the Deputy 
 Minister Socrates Xynidis.
 
 In this report: In response to the above question tabled in the House by 
 Congressman Alexander Short [That's a translation of Alexander Kontos -- 
 M.Y.] , you know that it has submitted documentation to permit installation 
 and operation of industrial plant of this type»
 
 Negative responses from Papakonstantinou - Sokos.
 
 Respondents who were released from Alexander Short [Kontos], included a cover 
 of the Environment Minister George Papakonstantinou and a response by the 
 Head of the Department of Industry that the YPEKA not submitted any 
 application. Also by the Secretary of ADMTH letter sent by the Director of 
 the relative address of Apoakentromensi Administration Lambrini Rizos.
 
 There is no known application for approval of building fusion power 
 nickel-hydrogen has not been filed and that of the crop [??] should be 
 ensured through the Environmental Impact Study filed in each case.
 
 


Re: [Vo]:What the Breakup Means

2011-08-07 Thread Charles Hope
Quite impressive for a company we were told was thrown together hastily this 
spring.


Sent from my iPhone. 

On Aug 7, 2011, at 13:39, Akira Shirakawa shirakawa.ak...@gmail.com wrote:


 They have dozens of experts and hundreds of millions of dollars, and a 
 board of directors that would be suitable for any Fortune 500 company, with 
 extensive experience in industry.
 
 

 


Re: [Vo]:[Political OT]: Global negative income tax

2011-08-06 Thread Charles Hope
It's not reserved for poor countries, but weak countries. Thus, poor Libya, 
having given up its nuclear ambitions, gets smacked around with a large trout, 
whereas poor DPRK is allowed to fire missiles randomly around its region, and 
it receives a finger wag. 

Craig, truly brilliant post.


Sent from my iPhone. 

On Aug 6, 2011, at 11:04, Jouni Valkonen jounivalko...@gmail.com wrote:

 2011/8/6 Craig Haynie cchayniepub...@gmail.com:
 You propose to end war with a
 global democracy, but wars will never end as long as we give the power
 seekers the ability to wage war.
 
 I have not seen a war in 66 years, because I live in civilized and
 rich country. Believe me, war is something that is only reserved for
 poor people. If we end poverty, we will end all wars. 



Re: [Vo]:[Political OT]: Global negative income tax

2011-08-06 Thread Charles Hope


Sent from my iPhone. 

On Aug 6, 2011, at 18:54, OrionWorks - Steven Vincent Johnson 
orionwo...@charter.net wrote:


  
 
 ... They don't want to hear about the fact that when government employees 
 spend their money it boosts the economy in exactly the same manner as what 
 would be spent from individuals who work and earn income out in the free 
 market. Money is money. It makes no difference where the currency comes from 
 nor how the currency is eventually spent. 
 

No. Creating products according to market demand is different than creating 
them without any market demand. Otherwise the unemployed could all get rich 
hiring each other to create and sell snotty tissues and books filled with with 
random words.  


Has it been that long since the USSR crumbled that we have forgotten this? 
Leftists in power all over the world have to come face the superiority of 
markets to determine what should be produced, except for the west, where they 
are mercifully protected from the consequences of their ideas. 

Re: [Vo]:Passerini's Prediction

2011-08-03 Thread Charles Hope
Consider how futile it should be to make a prediction six months out, as Rossi 
did regarding October, if reliability was still being addressed the entire 
time. That does not smell right. One can only predict confidently about well 
controlled processes. Why arbitrarily box oneself in like that?



Sent from my iPhone. 

On Aug 3, 2011, at 11:17, Abd ul-Rahman Lomax a...@lomaxdesign.com wrote:

  However, if Rossi fails to deliver in October…
 
 And I'd now bet that Rossi will fail to deliver. Rossi's recent comments 
 indicate that he is still struggling with reliability. 



Re: [Vo]:Kimbler's Parts

2011-08-01 Thread Charles Hope
Was going to blog about this tonight. The punchline is that, contrary to the 
graph, the isotopic composition is very terrestrial. 


Sent from my iPhone. 

On Aug 1, 2011, at 13:37, Terry Blanton hohlr...@gmail.com wrote:

 Like Art's Parts, these artifacts of the Roswell crash show isotopic 
 anomalies:
 
 http://www.openminds.tv/test-confirms-roswell-debris-733/
 
 We had always planned to check small animal lairs if we ever had a
 chance to visit the crash site.
 
 T
 



Re: [Vo]:ColdFusionNow reports support for research from influential person in Italy

2011-07-27 Thread Charles Hope
Among all the Millises and the Millses, I'd say Milli was practically born for 
this field. 

Sent from my iPhone. 

On Jul 27, 2011, at 16:04, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:

 See:
 http://coldfusionnow.wordpress.com/2011/07/23/viareggio-cold-fusion-conference-science-politics-and-an-italian-competitor/
 
 
 QUOTE:
 
 19.10 – Among the public Milly Moratti takes the word and states that there 
 are clearly now experimental evidences of Cold Fusion.
 
 Now, for the one who do not know, Milli Moratti is the wife of Massimo 
 Moratti, one of the richest man in Italy and owner of the Saras Petrol 
 Refinery, The biggest in Italy and one of the biggest in Europe.
 That’s a 5,3 Billion Euro Company.
 She has money and the political knowledge.
 
 
 [I have never heard of this person.]
 
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massimo_Moratti
 
 - Jed
 


Re: [Vo]:They say liquid water can't be hotter than boiling...

2011-07-16 Thread Charles Hope
I would have guessed the water would stop swirling within 10s, long before 
boiling, which in my oven I attain by setting it to 5:30. 




 The reason for swirling it was just that a lot of microwave ovens seem to 
 heat from the top, and if you don't get it swirling, you end up with a cup of 
 tepid water with a layer of boiling water a fraction of an inch thick 
 floating on the top. I'd actually have guessed that water in motion was 
 *less* likely to superheat than still water.
 
 



Re: [Vo]:Joshua Cude and a repeated misrepresentation, patents, and a discussion of the chimera of cold fusion

2011-06-03 Thread Charles Hope
This style of quotation is nonstandard and difficult to follow for large 
messages. Regular email clients handle the creation and display of nested 
quotations in an agreeable manner, which your formatting breaks. If you prefer 
to use a word processor for composition, please begin a reply, copy that to the 
word processor and add in-line comments normally, and then email that. Thanks!


Sent from my iPhone. 

On Jun 2, 2011, at 14:06, Joshua Cude joshua.c...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Thu, Jun 2, 2011 at 10:19 AM, Abd ul-Rahman Lomax a...@lomaxdesign.com 
 wrote:
 
 CudeMaybe, but Rossi OK'd them.
 
 Lomax Yes, he did. However, the point was that this was not simply what Cude 
 claimed, using his own designates. 
 
 OK. I used the wrong word. I don't think my message is significantly weakened 
 if I make the same claim using vetted observers or something like that.
 
 


Re: [Vo]: Why are the electric and magnetic fields perpendicular?

2011-05-27 Thread Charles Hope
Not to be troublesome, but if you're looking for a mathematical answer, but you 
don't want the one based on our best understanding (relativity and 
electrostatics) then I'm even more confused about what your question meant. 

At least if you were asking for a philosophical metaphysical answer, your 
rejection of Cude's essay would make sense. 



Sent from my iPhone. 

On May 27, 2011, at 1:58, Mark Iverson zeropo...@charter.net wrote:

 With all the interaction that JC has had on this discussion group, he should 
 be well aware that most contributors on this list are probably at least as 
 knowledgeable as he, and probably much more so.  His statement about the 
 language of physics is math is obvious. And CH's suspicions are wrong...
 I suspect that the sort of answer that Mark seeks could not be written 
 mathematically. 
 Of course it could be written mathematically!
  
 Mathematics is an extremely diverse field, and much of it is abstract and/or 
 has absolutely NO relation to any real physical manifestations.  It is my 
 contention that some critical aspects of mainstream physical theories contain 
 such abstract mathematical constructs... I think it would be quite fruitful 
 to re-examine theoretical concepts with a fresh approach based on rational 
 physical constructs.
 -Mark
 
 
 From: Charles Hope [mailto:lookslikeiwasri...@gmail.com] 
 Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2011 7:54 AM
 To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
 Subject: Re: [Vo]: Why are the electric and magnetic fields perpendicular?
 
 
 On May 26, 2011, at 4:09, Joshua Cude joshua.c...@gmail.com wrote:
 
  The language of physics is math. 
 
 
 This is a deep statement, worth unpacking. It means that if an idea can't be 
 written mathematically, it is not physics. I suspect that the sort of answer 
 that Mark seeks could not be written mathematically. 


Re: [Vo]: Why are the electric and magnetic fields perpendicular?

2011-05-27 Thread Charles Hope
 to what we have
 now.
 
 What is missing from much of physical theory is a physical model first... 
 Before the mathematics.
 After relativity and QM came along, the mathematical physicists began to 
 dominate theoretical
 physics and the importance of having a foundation of a physical model 
 disappeared.
 
 -Mark
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Charles Hope [mailto:lookslikeiwasri...@gmail.com]
 Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2011 5:48 PM
 To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
 Cc: vortex-l@eskimo.com
 Subject: Re: [Vo]: Why are the electric and magnetic fields perpendicular?
 
 How about giving a few examples of the sort of answer you'd find satisfactory?
 
 



Re: [Vo]: Why are the electric and magnetic fields perpendicular?

2011-05-25 Thread Charles Hope
How about giving a few examples of the sort of answer you'd find satisfactory?


Sent from my iPhone. 

On May 25, 2011, at 20:33, Mark Iverson zeropo...@charter.net wrote:

 Robin beat me to the punch... I was changing spark-plugs and serpentine belts 
 on my car!
 
 Robin hits the nail on the head... Anything mathematical is the MODEL, and is 
 supposed to reflect
 physical reality.  My question was about the physical world -- what I was 
 asking got was a rational,
 qualitative, cause and effect sort of explanation.
 
 As Robin stated, twice now, and I'll state it a third time, 
 The perpendicular nature of E and B fields existed PRIOR to Maxwell, or even 
 cavemen, or even life
 on this planet!
 
 I'm afraid that this reflects very poorly on JC's understanding of what is 
 more fundamental, the
 experiment (physical reality, facts) or model (theory).  JC has shown a great 
 ability to regurgitate
 what he has read in his textbooks, in great detail, but his responses to this 
 simple question seems
 to indicate that he hasn't any idea of the difference between physical 
 reality and the mathematical
 models that attempt to explain what is observed.
 
 Care to put your horse before the cart this time and give it another stab, 
 Joshua?  
 And you'd better not have any mathematical jargon in your answer...
 
 PS: I mean, stab at explaining perpendicularity of E and B fields, not stab 
 your horse!
 :-)
 
 -Mark 
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: mix...@bigpond.com [mailto:mix...@bigpond.com] 
 Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2011 4:35 PM
 To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
 Subject: Re: [Vo]: Why are the electric and magnetic fields perpendicular?
 
 In reply to  Joshua Cude's message of Wed, 25 May 2011 17:54:32 -0500:
 Hi,
 [snip]
 Maxwell's equations were developed to describe laboratory electricity 
 and magnetism experiments.
 
 ...from which the peculiar perpendicular nature of the phenomenon was already 
 evident.
 
 The resulting equations then predicted the existence of electromagnetic 
 waves with the correct speed. As Maxwell put it: The conclusion was 
 inescapable: light is an electromagnetic disturbance in the form of 
 waves propogated in the ether.
 
 True.
 
 The equations also require that the
 field are perpendicular.
 
 I think that was already evident from the experiments, and the maths was 
 designed specifically to
 encompass this fact (otherwise it would have yielded incorrect results).
 
 Note that Maxwell actually brought together the work done by a number of 
 others and created an
 encompassing mathematical treatment of their work, but the perpendicular 
 aspect was already in that
 work.
 
 Regards,
 
 Robin van Spaandonk
 
 http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/project.html
 



Re: [Vo]:Joshua Cude at it, part 2

2011-05-25 Thread Charles Hope
What a profound statement. Thank you!


Sent from my iPhone. 

On May 25, 2011, at 15:44, Rich Murray rmfor...@gmail.com wrote:

 Let's encourage non ad hominem, civil, polite, gracious, patient,
 evidence and detail oriented, genteel, lightly humorous, collaborative
 communication -- one of the finest cultural innovations in human
 history -- the destiny of any intrepid explorer is a path littered
 with mistakes.
 
 Rich Murray
 
 



Re: [Vo]: Why did the engineer Rossi beat all the scientists? WAS: Rossi bets the farm on Ni62?

2011-05-21 Thread Charles Hope
This paper is pretty harsh. 
http://iopscience.iop.org/1367-2630/7/1/127/pdf/njp5_1_127.pdf It's difficult 
to imagine how the CQM advocates could have adequately addressed these 
questions. 

 

Sent from my iPhone. 

On May 21, 2011, at 3:23, mix...@bigpond.com wrote:

 In reply to  OrionWorks - Steven Vincent Johnson's message of Fri, 20 May 2011
 07:24:55 -0500:
 Hi,
 [snip]
 From Robin:
 
 [snip]
 Is there anyone who believes Mills' hydrino theory who also understands
 quantum mechanics?
 
 Yes, Mills. :)
 
 (Actually he's not the only one, there are probably quite a few, but far
 less
 that would go out on a limb and admit it.)
 Personally I think QM is the norm, and Mills is an allowed exception,
 which
 means that it happens some of the time.
 
 Some of the time??? X'plain yourself Sir Robin! ;-)
 
 Mills' ground state orbitals are spherical. In QM the electron travels 
 radially
 frequently passing through the nucleus. I think the latter is the norm, but I
 think Bohr like orbitals are possible, and occasionally happen (see Rydberg
 orbitals). IOW I don't think Millsian spherical orbitals are ruled out, I just
 don't think they are common. However under the right circumstances, I think 
 an H
 atom can be convinced to occupy such an orbital.
 
 Regards,
 
 Robin van Spaandonk
 
 http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/project.html
 



Re: [Vo]: Why did the engineer Rossi beat all the scientists? WAS: Rossi bets the farm on Ni62?

2011-05-19 Thread Charles Hope
Is there anyone who believes Mills' hydrino theory who also understands quantum 
mechanics?

Sent from my iPhone. 

On May 15, 2011, at 16:08, Mark Iverson zeropo...@charter.net wrote:

 I renamed this thread cuz I'd like to hear opinions as to WHY an engineer 
 succeeded where ALL the scientists failed in optimizing the excess heat and 
 controllability of whatever this reaction is???
  
 In our conversation about Mills/BLP, Peter wrote:
 His theory is OK, verified by experiment.
  
 But an 'engineer' (i.e., someone not real knowledgeable about theoretical 
 foundations) optimized the excess heat effect and controllability of the 
 reaction in only a few years and with very little money compared to BLP (20 
 years and $60M)...
  
 So either Mills' theory has serious errors or holes, or they have incompetent 
 scientists/engineering managers who are making  bad decisions as to what 
 tests/experiments to do, thus wasting alot of time and not achieving true 
 UNDERSTANDING of what variables affect the reaction.
  
 If Mills' theories were accurate, then optimizing/manipulating the reaction 
 mechanisms would have happened by now... and they would have beat Rossi to 
 the market.  What's more likely is that the conclusions that come out of 
 Mills' theories have caused them to go down numerous 'dead-ends'... and 
 Mills' ego refuses to acknowledge that his theory needs some serious  
 revisions.
 -Mark
 
 
 From: Peter Gluck [mailto:peter.gl...@gmail.com] 
 Sent: Saturday, May 14, 2011 11:43 PM
 To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
 Subject: Re: EXTERNAL: Re: [Vo]:Rossi bets the farm on Ni62?
 
 The reason is, in my opinion, that is very difficult to achieve
 a CONTINUOUS generation of energy- see my paper 
 http://egooutpeters.blogspot.com/2011/04/questions-preparing-swot-analysis-of-ni.html
  what conditions are necessary for a new source of energy.
 
 But I think this year (good for new energy, it seems) Randy will be on the 
 market with his CIHT technology.
 His theory is OK, verified by experiment. Technology is more difficult than 
 scientific experiments.
 Peter
 
 
 On Sun, May 15, 2011 at 9:15 AM, Mark Iverson zeropo...@charter.net wrote:
 I would wager that the reason Mills hasn't got a commercial device, after 20 
 years and $60M, is because his theory is flawed...
 -Mark
 
 
 From: Peter Gluck [mailto:peter.gl...@gmail.com] 
 Sent: Saturday, May 14, 2011 9:46 PM
 
 To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
 Subject: Re: EXTERNAL: Re: [Vo]:Rossi bets the farm on Ni62?
 
 Perhaps the best person to discuss your hydrino ideas is Randy Mills himself. 
  
 
 
 
 -- 
 Dr. Peter Gluck
 Cluj, Romania
 http://egooutpeters.blogspot.com
 


Re: [Vo]:A brief discussion on Permanent Magnet Motor configurations

2011-05-14 Thread Charles Hope
The aether that was debunked a century ago, or a different one?


Sent from my iPhone. 

On May 13, 2011, at 21:53, John Berry aethe...@gmail.com wrote:

 
 Well, explain how it is to be tested and we'll give it a shot.
 
 T
 
  
 My opinion is that the conservation of energy is generally accurate and than 
 magnets and most conditions tend to be conservative.
 
 However this is all dependent on the state of the underlying medium of matter 
 and energy, if you change this medium the rules can change and energy can 
 appear to be created or destroyed, whether it is actually created or 
 liberated from some near infinite storehouse of energy (ZPE if you will) is 
 only of philosophical concern.
 
 The process as I understand it consists of creating a flux source, a motor, 
 buzzer or choke are all fine choices provided they are unshielded and the 
 magnetic circuit is open or leaky.
 
 Then you have pickup coils (diodes and bulbs may also do some pickup), these 
 are coupled only most loosely to this primary flux generating circuit, the 
 pickup circuit can't be too directly connected to the flux source if you want 
 to loop it.
 Isolation can be achieved with an isolation transformer, capacitors but other 
 options have been used. (the pickup circuit is rarely ever grounded)
 
 To reach OU power you need to engage the aether, this increases the energy 
 induced into the pickup circuit.
 
 There are many ways to engage the aether but it is hard to know what will 
 prove to be sufficient.
 I would strongly recommend replication of Romero's Muller Generator, firstly 
 because he was almost certainly genuine. (if you want evidence of this there 
 are good arguments to be made including details)
 
 This type of setup stands a very good chance of working.
 
 The details have been provided and I can provide many suggestions on 
 stimulating the aether (vacuum, ZPE) if it does not initially work.
 
 Replications should make use of the multi strand insulated wire (as that is 
 one means to engauge the aether) and be as close as practical to Muller's 
 specifications.
 
 Tuning of the distance was something he did a lot of to get it to self run.
 
 Alternately a study in the energy induced in a pickup circuit could be 
 undertaken without need to get into attempt to self run or even produce OU, 
 just showing increased energy being induced.
 
 
 Are you interested in replicating this one?
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Re: [Vo]:Beene and Blanton: Self-Runnier vs. 1 MW plant : Duel to the Death!

2011-05-14 Thread Charles Hope
Where was this suspicious pre-demo mentioned? 



Sent from my iPhone. 

On May 13, 2011, at 22:48, Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:

 No disagreement to speak of - not to mention in a couple of months I might
 be arguing Terry's position and he might have mine. But the truth will out,
 and therefore let me state a present concern more succinctly. First, rent
 the movie Boiler Room if you have not seen it... for the entertainment
 value alone.
 
 Second, there is evidence that an interim pre-demo will take place in 8-10
 weeks in Xanthi, Greece - invitation only - which will coincide with a
 founders stock offering. This will be a fully staged and produced media
 event featuring a working factory making E-Cats ... and with a quite few of
 them in apparent operation - but do not touch anything, or ask too many
 questions, even if you hear extravagant claims.
 
 Since it is not the 'official' demo, nor the official IPO, there will be no
 skeptical criticism, and in the end no more facts will be known than now.
 The set-up of a good pump and dump is to get a percentage of shares out to
 well-connected investors and other brokers - who provide constant pumping
 action 'on the street' since they have priority for more. These touts and
 pundits will be televised in the media, praising the technology and begging
 for more stock. Feeding frenzy ensues.
 
 Good reason to hire a stockbroker, instead of a technologist or real
 manager, to head your company. I have heard that it is possible for a
 startup to obtain authorization to issue 100 billion shares with no prior
 record of a real product - but that could be only in Calgary or BC :)
 
 None of this is a huge problem if you have a rock-solid product to offer
 with nothing to hide ... hmmm ... kinda like the Ballard fuel cell ?
 
 
 -Original Message-
 
 From: Terry Blanton 
 Ah Finally!
 
 Ladies and Gentlemen! Time for this evening's main attraction!
 
 I hate to disappoint the audience; but, there will be no fight here.
 I understand Jones' opinion, respect his opinion and will defend to
 the death his right to express it.
 
 But, opinions are like rectums, we all have them and they all stink.
 
 Until the truth outs, it's all speculum.
 
 T
 
 
 



Re: [Vo]:Let us exercise some common sense in terms of dimensional analysis.

2011-05-03 Thread Charles Hope
That's the mini supernova argument. We don't know what's inside the reactor, 
but we know it doesn't resemble a supernova, so we are obliged to assume that 
any copper found is just regular copper that migrated. It's way too fanciful to 
assume otherwise at this point. 



Sent from my iPhone. 

On May 3, 2011, at 9:47, OrionWorks - Steven V Johnson 
svj.orionwo...@gmail.com wrote:

 Correct me if I have misunderstood the most important relevant facts
 being debated here, but I believe Jones is making a strong claim that
 the percentages of isotopes allegedly found distributed throughout the
 copper found within one of Rossi's used e-cats clearly indicates that
 the Rossi-effect cannot be nuclear in origin.
 
 I've thought about this claim for a spell, but for now the only
 conclusion I can come up with is:
 
 Why not? What do any of us really know about how Mother Nature chooses
 to go about rearranging isotopes such as those belonging to copper.
 For all we know the speculated Rossi-Effect may exploit natural
 environmental conditions that tend to encourage a natural
 distribution of copper isotopes, such as what we tend to find in the
 ground. Seems to me that at this stage of the game we just don't have
 enough facts at hand to warrant any kind of a definitive conclusion
 about what is considered a nuclear effect and what isn't.
 
 Yeah, yeah, we know what the nuclear fizicists will say on the matter.
 What do they know. ;-)
 
 Regards
 Steven Vincent Johnson
 www.OrionWorks.com
 www.zazzle.com/orionworks
 



Re: [Vo]:The 12.4 kW claims of January 14 wrong?

2011-04-30 Thread Charles Hope
This very interesting paper 
http://astro1.panet.utoledo.edu/~srf/isotopes/li1.pdf is all about isotope 
ratios varying from region to region. 



Sent from my iPhone. 

On Apr 30, 2011, at 15:56, Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:

 From: Jed Rothwell
 
  
 
  
 
 Ø  Anyone reviewing the astronomical data on isotopes, going back to the 
 1940s, would know that is wrong.  
 
 JB: You must have gone absolutely NUTS. You are so completely wrong that you 
 must have no understanding of this subject at all. What data?
 
 Ø  JR: See the work of Townes and, for example, Interstellar isotope ratios 
 from mm-wave molecular absorption spectra. These studies would not be 
 meaningful if isotopic ratios varied in different parts of the universe.
 
  
 
 LOL. I see you haven’t understood this at all, let alone read Townes.
 
  
 
 Townes measured the `primordial' abundance of the `light elements', in the 
 ISM. This has absolutely nothing to do with heavy elements in planets, all of 
 which have isotopes that come from second or third generation stars, and all 
 of which are vastly different from ‘primordial’ abundances, and each galaxy 
 will have incorporated literally trillions of unique isotope balances …
 
  
 
 ….or do you really think that out earth has a primordial balance of copper - 
 which was unaffected by the stellar event which formed out sun? This is 
 preposterous. Again you are showing an incredible intellectual deficit in 
 this argument – and that reflects poorly on Rossi.
 
  
 
 I am sure that in time, skeptics like Bob Park will pick up on this and beat 
 you into the dirt with it! It is so foolish for you to be promoting this kind 
 of bogosity!
 
  
 
 There are no heavy elements in the ISM spectrum which can be measured 
 accurately BTW and subsequent stellar processing of the light elements has 
 altered the relative abundances in every single star if you look close 
 enough. That’s right every single star has its own ratio of deuterium to 
 hydrogen to helium, and every single nova also produced heavier elements such 
 as carbon, nitrogen and oxygen in absolutely unique ratios.
 
  
 
 Copper-63 exists in a different ratio on our own moon, for goodness sake! 
 There dozens of analyses of moon rocks online. When Kullander say it is 
 natural – that is for earth but do you really think that the Rossi reactor, 
 if one ever gets to the moon – will then magically shift gears and start 
 producing fusion debris that matches the natural abundance there?
 
  
 
 Geeze can’t you see the shallowness of your position?  Stellar 
 nucleosynthesis is a function of initial mass and composition - and larger 
 mass stars and planets have isotopes which are very different from low mass - 
 so Townes work was on the ISM was essentially meaningless to this, and like 
 Newton’s work on alchemy – primitive!
 
  
 
 Give it up Rothwell – you are beyond wrong and I do not want to make you look 
 even more imbecilic by continuing this thread ad infinitum – but if you want 
 that as part of the record, then so be it.
 
  
 
 Please do take the time to read your references, though, as it makes things 
 work so much more smoothly …
 
  
 
 Jones
 
  


Re: [Vo]:Spring constant in plasma oscillations

2011-04-24 Thread Charles Hope
I didn't see tensors mentioned in the Wikipedia page. Tensors of what degree? 
Wouldn't you be dealing with a distribution of them anyway?



Sent from my iPhone. 

On Apr 24, 2011, at 10:28, David Jonsson davidjonssonswe...@gmail.com wrote:

 I have really found a bad thing. On the link below they talk about effective 
 mass whewre they model the mass of the electron as a tensor instead of 
 calculating with the forces from surrounding atoms. It looks real bad. I was 
 planning on using the well known spring formula omega^2 = k/m and now m turns 
 out to be a tensor!
 
 I think it is bad physics to insert the concept of effective mass tensor. It 
 is being detemined by measurements with various methods so it can include 
 other effects.
 
 I think it would be better to assume that permeability and permittivity 
 changes in space. That leads to an apparent change in electron mass since it 
 increases the magnetic reluctance of the electron. Since the mass and charge 
 relation of an electron is fixed it is impossible to distinguish if an 
 apparent increase in inertia of the electron is due to mass increase or 
 change in its magnetic field. Since mass is to be considered fixed and 
 permeability (µ) and permittivity (€) variable I think it is better to stick 
 to that view.
 
 I will use the classical electron mass with eventual alterations to € and µ 
 if needed.
 
 David
 
 On Sun, Apr 24, 2011 at 3:33 PM, David Jonsson davidjonssonswe...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
 This might be an easy question but it is not on my mind right now.
 
 I would like to determine the trajectory of the electrons in plasma 
 oscillations:
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasma_oscillation
 
 I need this in order to find out how big an eventual magnetic field from in 
 can be in the case of rotating medium. 
 
 The plasma oscillation is like a thermal vibration in the sense that 
 electrons go back and forth. Since the central acceleration is different in 
 forwards and backwards motion the orbit of the electron is not linear but 
 sightly elliptic and thus rotating and giving cause to a magnetic field. 
 
 I sit in a park in Stockholm and I try to determine this effect. Winter has 
 ceased and there are bumble bees, wasps and butterflies flying around here. 
 The first ones I have seen this year. i have 4 hours battery left on the 
 laptop and I hope this is enough for at least some partial results.
 
 David
 
 David Jonsson, Sweden, phone callto:+46703000370
 
 


Re: [Vo]:RE: Rothwell goes into brain freeze - Thermal power.pdf

2011-04-20 Thread Charles Hope
I was referring to the report Jones Beene refers to, unseen, by an unnamed 
author, which uses thermodynamics to raise questions. 


Sent from my iPhone. 

On Apr 20, 2011, at 9:58, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:

 Charles Hope wrote:
 
 Expert opinion, indeed. Not bad enough that the box is black but we're 
 reacting to a secret report shown only to Levi, the contents of which can 
 only be guessed at?
 
 It is not a secret report shown to Levi, it is a public report made by Levi, 
 here:
 
 http://www.nyteknik.se/nyheter/energi_miljo/energi/article3108242.ece
 
 - Jed
 



Re: [Vo]:RE: Rothwell goes into brain freeze - Thermal power.pdf

2011-04-19 Thread Charles Hope
Expert opinion, indeed. Not bad enough that the box is black but we're reacting 
to a secret report shown only to Levi, the contents of which can only be 
guessed at?



Sent from my iPhone. 

On Apr 20, 2011, at 0:14, Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:

 Robin.
 
 My initial reaction is that the assumptions could be way off.
 
 
 The delta-T of 500K is too large, and the wall thickness of 2 mm is thin for 
 this application. There could be other problems too.
 
 For 25 bar pressure, how are you going not to get by with 2 mm walls - more 
 like 6. If the temp gradient is like more like 300 - which would be water at 
 350 K and interior at 650K, and the wall is 6mm - this might be more accurate.
 
 Next, the actual conductance is some fraction of maximum in practice, due to 
 surface oxidation on one or both sides. Not sure where to go for that 
 information.
 
 
 This is where an expert opinion comes in handy. All in all, don't you think 
 it conceivable that this reactor runs at an order of magnitude less maximum 
 heat transfer, and the average could even be a fraction of that?
 
 Jones
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: mix...@bigpond.com [mailto:mix...@bigpond.com]
 Sent: Tuesday, April 19, 2011 8:48 PM
 To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
 Subject: Re: [Vo]:RE: Rothwell goes into brain freeze - Thermal power.pdf
 
 In reply to  Jones Beene's message of Tue, 19 Apr 2011 08:27:37 -0700:
 
 Hi,
 
 [snip]
 
 .plus, stainless conducts heat so poorly that a 5 KG reactor would
 
 surely melt before that rate of energy release could be sustained for
 
 15 minutes anyway - do you really doubt that?
 
 Please see attached.
 
 Regards,
 
 Robin van Spaandonk
 
 http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/Project.html


Re: [Vo]:A wiki for compiling Rossi's hints

2011-04-18 Thread Charles Hope
Ok that's the sort of possible issue I was referring to in terms of their 
policies being acceptable. 

I have a domain already and can have a mediawiki set up there probably this 
weekend, if others share your concerns. 

If you would prefer to do it, or can get it up faster, feel free. 



Sent from my iPhone. 

On Apr 18, 2011, at 17:20, Angela Kemmler angela.kemm...@gmx.de wrote:

 citation:
 
 
 BTW, is this not a good place to set one up at?
 http://www.peswiki.com/index.php/Directory:Andrea_Rossi's_Cold_Fusion_Energy_Catalyzer_(E-Cat):_Frequently_Asked_Questions
 
 
 No. I remember very well that the company Pure Energy Systems Network 
 Incorporated (PESN) was involved in the Perendev-scandal. PESN-owner Allan 
 even was the owner of the swindle company Perendev internet domain 
 (perendev.com). He worked together with Maserati-owner Mike Brady who sold 
 not existing self-running electromagnetic generators he never delivered. 
 But he got money (1.4 million US Dollars) in advance from around 60 customers 
 and was sentenced here in Germany to five years and nine month in prison 
 (fraud). I remember the case very well. 
 
 PESN has clearly commercial interests, and our discussions of the 
 Rossi-principle have nothing to do with business. Further, they (PESN) talk 
 on their webpages about so called scalar waves, consipracy theories and 
 other pseudoscience:
 
 ...We seek to bring knowledge of suppressed technologies into more 
 conventional arenas ...
 
 Nobody supresses Rossi, even the italian television RAI3 talked about him, 
 there are three Wikipedia articles about the Ecat and the university of 
 Uppsala will perhaps test his device later this week.
 
 ***
 
 I installed sucessfully three times the Wikimedia software, that wikipedia 
 uses. It takes about one or two hours to install it and it is free. And a 
 domain costs here in Germany about 50 ct / month, in the USA perhaps even 
 less.  
 
 So, it seems for me to be the better choice than a ads-encircled environment 
 like a PESN - page. There is enough ads in the internet ! 
 
 Angela
 -- 
 NEU: FreePhone - kostenlos mobil telefonieren und surfen!
 Jetzt informieren: http://www.gmx.net/de/go/freephone
 



Re: [Vo]:About isotopic ratio on spent fuel (E-Cat)

2011-04-17 Thread Charles Hope
If the waste is identical to the fuel, that means no reaction involving it 
actually occurred, by definition. The material is at best merely a catalyst for 
a reaction with other fuel and waste. 





Sent from my iPhone. 

On Apr 15, 2011, at 22:52, Axil Axil janap...@gmail.com wrote:

 The scam status of the Rossi reactor has nothing to do with natural abundance 
 in Lenr reactions. It has been shown that all Lenr reactions produce waste 
 conformant to natural abundance. Like all Lenr reactions, the Rossi reactor 
 show natural abundance in it’s ash product. This should lend credence to the 
 claim that the Rossi reaction is real and that it is a valid Lenr Reaction.
 
 
 On Fri, Apr 15, 2011 at 10:27 PM, Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:
 Wait a minute. You want to change half the Standard Model of Physics in
 order to suggest that Rossi's device has some tiny chance of being
 theoretically possible in the oddball way that he thinks it is - when we're
 not even sure that it's not a total scam?
 
 ... now that is true devotion to a cause g
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Harry Veeder
 
 Has anyone described the necessary chain of stellar events that would
 produce
 the present isotopic abundance of copper and is there proof that all those
 events actually happened?
 
 My point is perhaps some elements/isotopes are formed naturally by a LENR
 process rather than by a succession  of stellar events. Therefore the reason
 why the isotopic abundance produced by the Rossi reactor is natural is
 because the Rossi reactor emulates how nature does it.
 
 Harry
 
 
 
 
 


[Vo]:A wiki for compiling Rossi's hints

2011-04-17 Thread Charles Hope
I'll look into setting up a wiki, which will be more convenient than passing 
around a word document. 


Sent from my iPhone. 


Re: [Vo]:A wiki for compiling Rossi's hints

2011-04-17 Thread Charles Hope
Flash is required?!

Sent from my iPhone. 

On Apr 17, 2011, at 17:36, .:.gotjosh ene...@begreen.nu wrote:

 I have begun to author a webspace at ahead.com:
 http://ahead.com/begreencc/ecatrossi
 
 it is a bit more visual and zoomable than a wiki... although not as
 searchable for the purely textual components...
 
 please contact me if you would like to collaborate / contribute...
 
 On Sun, Apr 17, 2011 at 23:21, Charles Hope
 lookslikeiwasri...@gmail.com wrote:
 I'll look into setting up a wiki, which will be more convenient than passing 
 around a word document.
 
 



Re: [Vo]:A wiki for compiling Rossi's hints

2011-04-17 Thread Charles Hope
If everyone wants to start keeping our list there, on a new page, that would be 
great. If there is no concern about their policies, I suggest it. 


 

Sent from my iPhone. 

On Apr 17, 2011, at 17:35, Esa Ruoho esaru...@gmail.com wrote:

 BTW, is this not a good place to set one up at?
 http://www.peswiki.com/index.php/Directory:Andrea_Rossi's_Cold_Fusion_Energy_Catalyzer_(E-Cat):_Frequently_Asked_Questions
 
 
 On Mon, Apr 18, 2011 at 12:35 AM, Esa Ruoho esaru...@gmail.com wrote:
 Hear hear!
 
 
 
 On Mon, Apr 18, 2011 at 12:21 AM, Charles Hope lookslikeiwasri...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
 I'll look into setting up a wiki, which will be more convenient than passing 
 around a word document.
 
 
 Sent from my iPhone.
 
 


Re: [Vo]:Vector form of centripetal acceleration in terms of v and v'

2011-03-28 Thread Charles Hope
Describe in what way? How was the Wikipedia page insufficient?


Sent from my iPhone. 

On Mar 27, 2011, at 20:52, David Jonsson davidjonssonswe...@gmail.com wrote:

 Can someone help me?
 
 More specifically: I need to be able to describe the acceleration component 
 perpendicular to the direction of the flow.
 
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centripetal_force was close but did not give me 
 what I needed.
 
 David
 
 David Jonsson, Sweden, phone callto:+46703000370
 
 


Re: [Vo]:It's Much Worse Than I Thought

2011-03-15 Thread Charles Hope
So why is it bad to have spent fuel around active fuel rods?

Sent from my iPhone. 

On Mar 15, 2011, at 20:32, Terry Blanton hohlr...@gmail.com wrote:

 I was puzzled what was going on with F4.  Now I understand.  The spent
 fuel ponds not only protect spent fuel; but, they temporarily store
 active fuel rods while they are doing reactor maintenance inspections.
 The cores of 4, 5 and 6 have their fuel stored in the SPENT FUEL
 PONDS!
 
 Quadruple plus not good.  This could really be far worse than
 Chernobyl.  There are likely now 3 reactors with active fuel rods
 stored in the spent fuel ponds along with the actual spent fuel.
 
 This is far worse than what is happening in reactors 1, 2 and 3.
 Except for three which has MOX fuel.
 
 Those 50 workers are likely DMW.
 
 Check the price of potassium iodine on EBay right now.
 
 T
 



Re: [Vo]:Yes, cold fusion is a fringe subject by the standards of Wikipedia

2011-02-27 Thread Charles Hope
There is no mathematical definition of fringe. A topic is fringe if the 
majority of scientists subjectively feel it is. Wikipedia is an excellent tool 
for judging such mass subjectivity. 



Sent from my iPhone. 

On Feb 27, 2011, at 11:29, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:

 Let me add that we are talking about two different definitions of fringe 
 here. This is, in part, a dispute over semantics.
 
 Cude is quite right about what he calls fringe and I agree that is a valid 
 use of the word. He is right that cold fusion fits that definition.
 
 However, I think that in the context of a scientific discovery, when we 
 invoke concepts such as fringe or marginal or proven we should use the 
 more rigorous definitions. We should stick to mathematical rather than 
 popular culture definitions. When we talk about movies or politics, fringe 
 is defined by whatever the majority thinks. Wikipedia or the New York Times 
 are the arbiters. When we talk about calorimetry or tritium, opinions don't 
 count. The majority view itself may be fringe, even though that seems 
 contradictory. The existing corpus of knowledge described in the textbooks 
 sets the standard. Quantitative measurements such as signal to noise decide 
 the issue. Not a headcount. Not who pulls political strings and gets to write 
 Op Ed columns in Washington Post (Robert Park), or which anonymous nitwit 
 named after a comic-book character prevails in the edit wars at Wikipedia.
 
 Decades from now, all knowledge of cold fusion may be lost. After I and 
 others who know the facts die, the mythology alone may survive. The only 
 references in textbooks or the mass media may claim that cold fusion was 
 pathological science that was never replicated, etc. The Wikipedia/Sci. Am. 
 version of history may prevail, because winners write history books. However, 
 the Wikipedia version is incorrect. We can determine this by objective, 
 absolute, universal standards. Cold fusion exists. It always has. It always 
 will. Science does settle some issues beyond question.
 
 It is rather quaint to assert absolute faith in the scientific method, but I 
 assert it! I may be mired in the 19th century, but I say there will never be 
 any way to disprove the heat beyond the limits of chemistry, tritium and 
 helium. Replicated experiments are the only standard of truth. Once you 
 achieve a certain level of replication, there is zero chance the results are 
 a mistake. Theory can always be overthrown. Experiments may be 
 re-interpreted. But in this case, the results are too simple and clear-cut to 
 be re-interpreted much. If the term nuclear means anything, and the 
 distinction between chemistry (changes in electron bonds) versus nuclear 
 (changes to the nucleus) mean anything, then cold fusion is a nuclear 
 reaction, by definition.
 
 - Jed
 



Re: [Vo]:Gravity as an Electrostatic Force by Professor Gupta

2011-02-27 Thread Charles Hope
One wonders how this accounts for the curvature of light under the influence of 
gravity. 

Sent from my iPhone. 

On Feb 27, 2011, at 15:08, Ron Kita chiralex.k...@gmail.com wrote:

 Greetings Votrex-L:
  
 Possible: Gravity Modification or Gravitational  Shielding ?
  
 There is an interesting paper by Professor R C Gupta : Gravity as a Secondary 
 Electrostatic Force:
 http://arxiv.org/ftp/physics/papers/0505/0505194.pdf
  
 Of special note: his acknowledgment of Dr Abdus Salam- a most interesting 
 connection.
  
 Respectfully,
 Ron Kita   ..   Chiralex


Re: [Vo]:What will convince Joshua Cude?

2011-02-24 Thread Charles Hope
It seems like the field needs a new improved experiment showing helium/heat. 
Joshua, can you specify some parameters that would convince you?

Sent from my iPhone. 

 



Re: [Vo]:What will convince Joshua Cude?

2011-02-22 Thread Charles HOPE
On Tue, Feb 22, 2011 at 12:00 PM, Abd ul-Rahman Lomax
a...@lomaxdesign.comwrote:


 The massive rejection of cold fusion, which extended to rejection of a
 graduate student thesis solely because it involved cold fusion research, and
 once the news of that got around, cut off the normal supply of labor for
 replication work. Nobody gets a Nobel Prize for boring replication, running
 the same experiment that others have run, over and over, and nobody gets
 rich from it. As I investigated cold fusion, I saw this, and I'm working,
 myself, subject to my own rather severe limitations, to fix this, I'm
 designing and constructing a single, very specific experiment, that anyone
 could replicate with about $100 and a power supply. But this work is not
 designed to prove cold fusion. All it will do, if the replication
 succeeds, is show a few neutrons per hour. (The design is, I hope,
 insensitive to normal charged particle radiation, and will effectively
 exclude background.)


Will that $100 include neutron detection?

-- 
Never did I see a second sun
Never did my skin touch a land of glass
Never did my rifle point but true
But in a land empty of enemies
Waiting for the tick-tick-tick of the want
A uranium angel
Crying “behold,”
This land that knew fire is yours
Taken from Corruption
To begin anew


Re: [Vo]:Rossi Wrap-up

2011-02-22 Thread Charles Hope
What part of the country are you in?

Rossi will see any work at replication as an attempt to steal his pot of gold. 
I wouldn't bother asking for his blessing. 


Sent from my iPhone. 

On Feb 22, 2011, at 16:18, Dennis den...@netmdc.com wrote:

 Like or not, unless another experimenter or group - more open to disclosure
 of the operational details, can approximate the Rossi results of extremely
 high COP at the kilowatt level, in the next few months leading up to the
 promised MW demonstration, then it is going to be a frustrating period for
 LENR researchers at many levels. 
 
 I agree there needs to be an independent replication of the device  that 
 offers an open demo.
 I fear that if Rossi fails to produce a 1MW system by Sept then the field 
 will be harmed.
 I am working on a path similar to Rossi (high temp gas loading) but with only 
 sporadic and inconsistent results.
 I do have the capability to work up to 1 or 2 kW with ease and higher with a 
 little modification.
  
 I would be happy to receive help in an effort to replicate the Rossi system.
 I am talking actual physical support not talk or money. - material 
 preparation, machining,...
 Please let me know if anyone finds out exactly what Rossi is using and the 
 conditions.
 Let me know if anyone wishes to join forces.
  
 I feel we are at a tipping point.  Either Rossi is correct and things will 
 develop quickly, or he is
 wrong and there will be great damage to the field.  Someone somewhere needs 
 to do an independent
 replication or at least an attempt - hopefully with Rossi's blessings , but 
 it needs to be done.
 A replication would need to be completely open to serious investigators.
 I am welcome to the idea of an open lab.  (within reason)
 My guess is that Rossi will to busy between now and Sept to do such a thing 
 himself.
  
 Dennis Cravens
  
  



Re: [Vo]:does classical mechanics always fail to predict or retrodict for 3 or more Newtonian gravity bodies? Rich Murray 2011.02.18

2011-02-19 Thread Charles Hope
Yes, the Devil is in the details. It pays to know just how much Devil is in 
there, and in old school 8 bit BASIC, there is much. 

Classical Mechanics gives results that are reversible. So if the model isn't, 
it's just a numerical flaw, and not a profound fact about physics.  



Sent from my iPhone. 

On Feb 19, 2011, at 1:57, Rich Murray rmfor...@gmail.com wrote:

 The only access to the physics itself we have with finite nervous
 systems is by using digital approximations with finite number strings,
 processed by algorithms of finite instruction size, so there are
 always round-off errors, which always diverge without limit, even if
 there are no close encounters.  So, it's a huge leap of faith to
 assume that the present data for a certain finite time interval
 actually allows prediction of a single future path or retrodiction of
 a single past path -- ie, classical mechanics probably can be proved
 to be incurably flawed, while allowing a certain amount of qualified
 estimation of probable paths forward and backward in time for the
 first 3 orbits or so...
 
 I've read that actually the 3-body problem does have exact general
 solutions, which involve such long, very slowly converging sequences
 of terms, as to be practically unworkable in practice.  Probaby, it
 can be shown that the energy needed to run an ideal finite digital
 computer until a certain limit of accuracy is reached (testable by
 running the same problem in parallel with identical computers,
 watching to see at what point the results start to scatter) will grow
 so fast with time and accuracy as to exhaust the energy available in
 any universe that supports the computer...
 
 Probably someone has already studied this...
 
 It's not just that shit happens -- happens happens...
 
 So, in reality, the present interval, however brief in time and tiny
 in space, necessarily in complex interaction with a possibly infinite
 external universe or hyperverse, must be inexplicable, causeless,
 ie, totally magical...
 
 This has in recent thousands of years been a common insight for
 advanced explorers of expanded awareness in many traditions.
 
 Rich Murray lookslikeallthoughtiswrong@godmail.com
 
 
 On Fri, Feb 18, 2011 at 9:50 PM, Charles Hope
 lookslikeiwasri...@gmail.com wrote:
 I'm thinking your findings of irreversibility reflected the idiosyncrasies 
 of floating point math represented in binary numbers, and not the physics 
 itself.
 
 Sent from my iPhone.
 
 On Feb 18, 2011, at 22:17, Rich Murray rmfor...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 does classical mechanics always fail to predict or retrodict for 3 or
 more Newtonian gravity bodies? Rich Murray 2011.02.18
 
 Hello Steven V Johnson,
 
 Can I have a free copy of the celestial mechanics software to run on
 my Vista 64 bit PC?
 
 In fall, 1982, I wrote a 200-line program in Basic for the
 Timex-Sinclair $100 computer with 20KB RAM that would do up to 4
 bodies in 3D space or 5 in 2D space, about 1000 steps in an hour,
 saving every 10th position and velocity -- I could set it up to
 reverse the velocities after the orbits became chaotic after 3 1/2
 orbits from initial perfect symmetry as circles about the common
 center of gravity, finding that they always maintained chaos, never
 returning to the original setup -- doubling the number of steps while
 reducing the time interval by half never slowed the the evolution of
 chaos by 3 1/2 orbits -- so I doubted that there is any mathematical
 basis for the claim that classical mechanics predicts the past or
 future evolution of any system with over 2 bodies, leading to a
 conjecture that no successful algorithm exists, even without any close
 encounters.
 
 Has this been noticed by others?
 
 Rich Murray rmfor...@gmail.com  505-819-7388
 1943 Otowi Road, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505
 
 On Fri, Feb 18, 2011 at 4:30 PM,
 OrionWorks - Steven V Johnson svj.orionwo...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Just a brief side-comment...
 
 Some of this lingo is fascinating stuff to me. Having performed a
 lot of theoretical computer simulation work on my own using good'ol
 fashion Newtonian based Celestial Mechanics algorithms, where
 typically I use a = 1/r^2, I noticed orbital pattern behavior
 transforms into something RADICALLY different, such as if I were to
 change the classical algorithm to something like a = 1/r^3. You can
 also combine both of them like a = 1/r^2 +/-  1/r^3 within the same
 computer algorithm. That produces interesting side effects too. I'm
 still trying to get a handle on it all.
 
 Regards
 Steven Vincent Johnson
 www.OrionWorks.com
 www.zazzle.com/orionworks
 
 
 
 



Re: [Vo]:does classical mechanics always fail to predict or retrodict for 3 or more Newtonian gravity bodies? Rich Murray 2011.02.18

2011-02-18 Thread Charles Hope
I'm thinking your findings of irreversibility reflected the idiosyncrasies of 
floating point math represented in binary numbers, and not the physics itself. 

Sent from my iPhone. 

On Feb 18, 2011, at 22:17, Rich Murray rmfor...@gmail.com wrote:

 does classical mechanics always fail to predict or retrodict for 3 or
 more Newtonian gravity bodies? Rich Murray 2011.02.18
 
 Hello Steven V Johnson,
 
 Can I have a free copy of the celestial mechanics software to run on
 my Vista 64 bit PC?
 
 In fall, 1982, I wrote a 200-line program in Basic for the
 Timex-Sinclair $100 computer with 20KB RAM that would do up to 4
 bodies in 3D space or 5 in 2D space, about 1000 steps in an hour,
 saving every 10th position and velocity -- I could set it up to
 reverse the velocities after the orbits became chaotic after 3 1/2
 orbits from initial perfect symmetry as circles about the common
 center of gravity, finding that they always maintained chaos, never
 returning to the original setup -- doubling the number of steps while
 reducing the time interval by half never slowed the the evolution of
 chaos by 3 1/2 orbits -- so I doubted that there is any mathematical
 basis for the claim that classical mechanics predicts the past or
 future evolution of any system with over 2 bodies, leading to a
 conjecture that no successful algorithm exists, even without any close
 encounters.
 
 Has this been noticed by others?
 
 Rich Murray rmfor...@gmail.com  505-819-7388
 1943 Otowi Road, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505
 
 On Fri, Feb 18, 2011 at 4:30 PM,
 OrionWorks - Steven V Johnson svj.orionwo...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Just a brief side-comment...
 
 Some of this lingo is fascinating stuff to me. Having performed a
 lot of theoretical computer simulation work on my own using good'ol
 fashion Newtonian based Celestial Mechanics algorithms, where
 typically I use a = 1/r^2, I noticed orbital pattern behavior
 transforms into something RADICALLY different, such as if I were to
 change the classical algorithm to something like a = 1/r^3. You can
 also combine both of them like a = 1/r^2 +/-  1/r^3 within the same
 computer algorithm. That produces interesting side effects too. I'm
 still trying to get a handle on it all.
 
 Regards
 Steven Vincent Johnson
 www.OrionWorks.com
 www.zazzle.com/orionworks
 



Re: [Vo]:Revised version Celani reports on gamma emission from Rossi device

2011-02-17 Thread Charles HOPE
On Thu, Feb 17, 2011 at 12:54 PM, Stephen A. Lawrence sa...@pobox.comwrote:



 If there *are* investors, on the other hand, then the demo is a much
 tougher sell, IMO, because when there's a pile of  money involved, even
 seemingly far-fetched explanations can no longer be discarded out of hand.



There are plenty of investors dollars floating around. Rossi explains:

*In the US we have a factory producing reactors. In Greece there is a Newco
owned by large European companies working in the field of energy. There are
proposals and we have a contract...*

He turns away propositions from new investors because he already has enough
money. A lot of it!

-- 
Never did I see a second sun
Never did my skin touch a land of glass
Never did my rifle point but true
But in a land empty of enemies
Waiting for the tick-tick-tick of the want
A uranium angel
Crying “behold,”
This land that knew fire is yours
Taken from Corruption
To begin anew


Re: [Vo]:Revised version Celani reports on gamma emission from Rossi device

2011-02-17 Thread Charles HOPE
Also, the fact that both meters were pegged. That sounds more like an event,
and less like the momentary exposure of a shielded catalyst.



On Thu, Feb 17, 2011 at 4:43 PM, Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:

  From: albedo5



 If we had a spectrum, we would know what it was - or more to the point,
 what it wasn't.

 I really, REALLY want a spectrum.  Just one.





 Hmm … could it be simply a matter of deduction ?



 … connect the dots with Celani being specifically the only party being
 disallowed, his earlier Cincinnati group replication paper (which Rossi must
 have read), the range of common signatures that are possible for Celani to
 have identified with a portable NaI meter, even if allowed, and the fact
 that to produce power for $.01/kWhr, a natural emitter instead of an
 expensive isotope would need to be used…



 … how many possibilities are there to chose from ?










-- 
Never did I see a second sun
Never did my skin touch a land of glass
Never did my rifle point but true
But in a land empty of enemies
Waiting for the tick-tick-tick of the want
A uranium angel
Crying “behold,”
This land that knew fire is yours
Taken from Corruption
To begin anew


Re: [Vo]:February 13th A. Rossi interview from 22passi blog

2011-02-16 Thread Charles HOPE
Murray should apologize to Earthtech for making derogatory comments on
Rossi's experiment that were quotes of Cude's criticism?


On Wed, Feb 16, 2011 at 9:11 PM, Terry Blanton hohlr...@gmail.com wrote:

 And that changes what I said how?

 T

 On Wed, Feb 16, 2011 at 7:09 PM, Rich Murray rmfor...@gmail.com wrote:
  Hello Terry,
 
  I'm still doubtful about the Rossi claims,




-- 
Never did I see a second sun
Never did my skin touch a land of glass
Never did my rifle point but true
But in a land empty of enemies
Waiting for the tick-tick-tick of the want
A uranium angel
Crying “behold,”
This land that knew fire is yours
Taken from Corruption
To begin anew


Re: [Vo]:Imagine a teakettle

2011-02-09 Thread Charles Hope
pV = nRT. If the temperature increases, there must be a corresponding increase 
in the pressure or the volume (or both). In this tea kettle case, the volume of 
the steam increases right out the top of the kettle. But the temperature can 
increase above 100. 


Sent from my iPhone. 

On Feb 9, 2011, at 21:43, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:

 Stephen A. Lawrence sa...@pobox.com wrote:
  
 The kettle is still filled with water vapor -- dry steam -- and the
 pressure inside is still 1 atmosphere, give or take a few millibars.
  
 What temperature do you suppose the steam inside the kettle is at?
 
 Could this be -- gasp! -- an example of superheated steam at 1 atmosphere??
 
 Darn right.
 
 Nope. It is 100 deg C. This is well established. The only way you can raise 
 the temperature is to pressurize it. It does not matter what the temperature 
 of kettle surface is.
 
 - Jed
 


  1   2   >