Re: [Vo]:A show of hands, whose going to ICCF-18? NET Collected Abstracts

2013-07-19 Thread Peter Gluck
No problems with Krivit, still an excellent, fast and methodic journalist; just he does not like the existing reality and builds alternative ones. I am curious to see his reaction if/when LENR+ goes commercial. Peter On Thu, Jul 18, 2013 at 11:56 PM, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.comwrote:

Re: [Vo]:Mizuno paper poster

2013-07-19 Thread Teslaalset
Thanks for sharing Jed! One thing that makes me wondering is how the Nickel mesh in fig.3 is connected. From the text I understand that either Pd or Ni is used in the experiments (likely as cathodes). That would mean D2 + Pd or H2 + Ni experiments were performed. Which if the two resulted in

RE: [Vo]:A show of hands, whose going to ICCF-18? NET Collected Abstracts

2013-07-19 Thread OrionWorks - Steven Vincent Johnson
From: Peter No problems with Krivit, still an excellent, fast and methodic journalist; just he does not like the existing reality and builds alternative ones. My issue with Krivit has not so much to do with his reporting skills as a journalist, but what I perceive to be an apparent

Re: [Vo]:Mizuno paper poster

2013-07-19 Thread Jed Rothwell
Teslaalset robbiehobbiesh...@gmail.com wrote: Thanks for sharing Jed! One thing that makes me wondering is how the Nickel mesh in fig.3 is connected. It is all explained in the paper, which should be available on Sunday. I am setting up everything so I can upload it before I leave for the

Re: [Vo]:A show of hands, whose going to ICCF-18? NET Collected Abstracts

2013-07-19 Thread Jed Rothwell
Peter Gluck peter.gl...@gmail.com wrote: No problems with Krivit, still an excellent, fast and methodic journalist; just he does not like the existing reality and builds alternative ones. So, he gives you excellent reports on an imaginary subject. More of a novelist than a journalist. - Jed

RE: [Vo]:Ghost of the HotCat ?

2013-07-19 Thread Jones Beene
Bob, Magnesium hydride does store more hydrogen than most metals and alloys - by weight, since magnesium is very low density - but the Space program in Europe and NASA use lanthanum nickel (LaNi5) for hydrogen storage. Rossi would have access to this alloy through U-Bologna. Low weight is not

Re: [Vo]:Ghost of the HotCat ?

2013-07-19 Thread Jack Cole
Very interesting Jones. This paper has some intriguing facts about lanthum and hydrogen aborption and release in lanthum. http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/j100476a006 On Fri, Jul 19, 2013 at 9:17 AM, Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote: Bob, ** ** Magnesium hydride does store

Re: [Vo]:Ghost of the HotCat ?

2013-07-19 Thread Jack Cole
Another interesting study of heat produced by lanthanum nickel absorbing hydrogen. They note the level is higher than is typical and attribute this to chemisorption. Could they have unintentionally produced LENR?

RE: [Vo]:Ghost of the HotCat ?

2013-07-19 Thread Jones Beene
Good find Jack. Indeed, together with potassium, which turned up in the spectroscopy data which Rossi included in his first patent - we may be close to stumbling upon the secret sauce... BTW - did anyone try to calculate the amp-turns of the Rossi HT reactor in that last testing? We have a

[Vo]:Tabletop fusion on the front page at MIZZOU

2013-07-19 Thread Jed Rothwell
I like it! Look at the link on the front page at Missouri U.: http://missouri.edu/ - Jed

Re: [Vo]:Rossi: it is shared now and does not anymore depend only on me

2013-07-19 Thread Jed Rothwell
Axil Axil janap...@gmail.com wrote: From past information, the Rossi reactor is hard to startup; it takes a long time to startup and a long time to shut down. . . . This is tolerable in industry but not in the home. It would not be a problem at home either. Especially not if the machine

RE: [Vo]:Tabletop fusion on the front page at MIZZOU

2013-07-19 Thread Jones Beene
Makes one realize how far they have ventured . in the sense of placing the University's good reputation on the line. After all, Missouri is the Show Me State a motto that implies a certain self-deprecating stubbornness and devotion to simple common sense. They looked, they saw, and they acted

[Vo]:Defkalion LIVE at ICCF-18?

2013-07-19 Thread Alan Fletcher
ICCF Program updated : (posted earlier) http://iccf18.research.missouri.edu/program.php Tuesday : 9:00 - 9:10 am Demonstration: Defkalion Reactor Startup 2:30 - 3:00 pm Demonstration: Defkalion Questions and Answers 5:30 - 5:40 pm Demonstration: Defkalion Closing

Re: [Vo]:Tabletop fusion on the front page at MIZZOU

2013-07-19 Thread Eric Walker
On Jul 19, 2013, at 11:36, Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote: After all, Missouri is the “Show Me State” a motto that implies “a certain self-deprecating stubbornness and devotion to simple common sense.” They looked, they saw, and they acted accordingly. My family goes back to

Re: [Vo]:Rossi: it is shared now and does not anymore depend only on me

2013-07-19 Thread James Bowery
With active control you can go from a COP of 6 to infinite. Then the question is how often does failure of the control system occur and what are the cleanup costs. It is entirely conceivable, if not likely, that an active control version will go to market that has a relatively low frequency of

[Vo]:Manning report on visit to Defkalion

2013-07-19 Thread Jed Rothwell
See: http://www.infinite-energy.com/images/pdfs/ManningIE110.pdf Let me quote from it: In April 2013, I met the officers and employees of Defkalion Green Technologies. I approached that meeting with mixed feelings. While driving to their laboratory at the University of British Columbia (UBC) in

Re: [Vo]:Rossi: it is shared now and does not anymore depend only on me

2013-07-19 Thread David Roberson
I suspect that ECAT active cooling would be possible with thermal control. This would behave in a reverse manner to active heating which is how he currently controls the ECAT. To make it work he would have to figure out a method of modulating the amount of heat that he extracts from the core

Re: [Vo]:Rossi: it is shared now and does not anymore depend only on me

2013-07-19 Thread Jed Rothwell
James Bowery jabow...@gmail.com wrote: With active control you can go from a COP of 6 to infinite. Then the question is how often does failure of the control system occur and what are the cleanup costs. The cleanup cost in this case should be no worse than a ruined cell. Like a light bulb

Re: [Vo]:Manning report on visit to Defkalion

2013-07-19 Thread Daniel Rocha
Are you ready to sign an NDA? No? No complaints, then. -- Daniel Rocha - RJ danieldi...@gmail.com

Re: [Vo]:Manning report on visit to Defkalion

2013-07-19 Thread Alan Fletcher
From: Daniel Rocha danieldi...@gmail.com Sent: Friday, July 19, 2013 2:13:26 PM Are you ready to sign an NDA? No? No complaints, then. Hey! Why don't we ALL sign an NDA? Be a bit boring to read Vortex posts, though: Defkalion has a much superior technology. I just know. :) I cannot say

Re: [Vo]:Manning report on visit to Defkalion

2013-07-19 Thread Jed Rothwell
Daniel Rocha danieldi...@gmail.com wrote: Are you ready to sign an NDA? No? No complaints, then. You misunderstand. I have no objection to people keeping secrets. I have no objection to an NDA. * BUT if Defkalion wants to keep their results secret, they should not come to a physics conference

Re: [Vo]:Manning report on visit to Defkalion

2013-07-19 Thread Jed Rothwell
I wrote: Many people keep their results partly secret. That is fine. As long as you present facts, figures and instrument readings to prove what you reveal, that is acceptable. The recent Levi report is a perfect example. It says nothing about the Rossi cell content. It sheds no light on

[Vo]:Uncertainty Airlines?

2013-07-19 Thread ChemE Stewart
Guys, In my search for energetic/dark/vacuum particles on Earth, I have uncovered something I would be concerned about From Seattle Times ref: Dreamliner Carbon Fiber Skin http://seattletimes.com/html/businesstechnology/2012145833_boeing18.html Engineers paid special attention to the 787 wing

[Vo]:From The Kiplinger's Letter, July 19, 2013 TECH section

2013-07-19 Thread OrionWorks - Steven Vincent Johnson
The claim is that Within five years 3D printing will be possible using a variety of materials not previously possible. This includes metal (Metal! That absolutely blows my mind!), nylon, clay, wood pulp, and many types of plastics and polymers. The complexity of what can be printed will continue

Re: [Vo]:From The Kiplinger's Letter, July 19, 2013 TECH section

2013-07-19 Thread Axil Axil
Researchers claim that they have cracked the code when it comes to using 3D printing to create stem cells — so what happens next? Unfortunately, organ donors are few and far between. Even if you have a potential match, after spending a long time on a waiting list, conditions worsen and an organ

Re: [Vo]:From The Kiplinger's Letter, July 19, 2013 TECH section

2013-07-19 Thread Axil Axil
PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel doesn’t like to invest in normal things. First he backed a libertarian island paradise, then it was paying kids not to go to college, and now it’s 3D-printed meat. According to CNET, the Thiel Foundation announced it’s donating $350,000 to a start-up called Modern

[Vo]:Magneisium carbonate record breaking surface area discovered at Uppsala University, Sweden

2013-07-19 Thread Frank roarty
Would this make a better catalyst? http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/07/130717172901.htm [snip] The most striking discovery was, however, not that they had produced a new material but it was instead the striking properties they found that this novel material possessed. It turned out that

[Vo]:Zeptosecond High Harmonic keV X-Ray Waveforms Driven by Midinfrared Laser Pulses

2013-07-19 Thread Axil Axil
Researchers use ultrashort flashes of light to probe fast movements in the atomic world. Femtosecond (1fs=10 ^-15 s ) laser pulses, now routine, are fast enough to follow the motion of atoms and have been used to watch the unfolding of chemical reactions. Attosecond (1as=10^ -18 s ) pulses,