CB Sites--
Check out the following for LiAlH4 decomposition:
http://rspa.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/royprsa/211/1106/335.full.pdf
Mark Jurich provided a nice reference list on the properties of LiAlH4
yesterday, Saturday, January 03, 2015 11:56 AM nere on Vortex-l. The one cited
above
I just have published this:
http://egooutpeters.blogspot.ro/2015/01/sunday-lenr-lecture-january-4-2015.html
and I take full responsibility for it.
Yours, as any other day,
Peter
--
Dr. Peter Gluck
Cluj, Romania
http://egooutpeters.blogspot.com
While this is a nice reference for thermal decomposition of LiAlH4, it is
for a low pressure. The decomposition will be different in a small closed
volume as the pressure goes into the range of 50-200 bar. Other reversible
hydrides saturate at about 30 bar. It is valuable to determine the max
An excerpt from the Lugano report:
A thermocouple probe, inserted into one of the caps, allows the control
system to manage power supply to the resistors by measuring the internal
temperature of the reactor. The hole for the thermocouple probe is also the
only access point for the fuel charge.
High hydrogen pressure could be a necessity for the dogbone, and controlling
that pressure could be a looming issue.
For those who do not think that metal to ceramic hermetic bonding is feasible,
in the design of an advanced version of the dogbone, here is a counter-argument
in the form of
For Terry and anyone who followed the mainly Russian claims on torsion
fields many years ago, check out the last name in the second paragraph
here:
http://amasci.com/freenrg/tors/tors3.html
Here is the Wiki entry, which is a bit unfair in lumping the good and bad
science - together to make
Jones--
Are there any data on the pressures in either the Parkhomov or Rossi reactors
that you know of? I do not know that a significant H pressure is required for
the LENR reactions in these two tests.
Bob
- Original Message -
From: Jones Beene
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Jones-
That a very interesting summary article about torsion fields, a phenomena with
which I was not familiar. Thanks.
The information (data) collected from stars that appear to be transmitted at a
rate many times the speed of light is very significant. Why is this not
reported in this
From: Bob Cook
Are there any data on the pressures in either the Parkhomov or Rossi reactors
that you know of? I do not know that a significant H pressure is required for
the LENR reactions in these two tests.
Bob- The is no actual pressure measurement that I’m aware of – for the
This technology started out with a bad reputation in the USA since it was
carrying cold-war baggage. There were some notable scams. The good was
swallowed up by the bad.
It's too bad because it is similar to spin coupling phenomena and SPP, which
is related.
Anytime something comes along
Jones--
I assume the experiments with telescopes and the determination of the future
position of stars assuming the FTL transmission of the torsion field were
correct. Has there been confirmation or rebuttal of this effect to your
knowledge. I guess the Russians could have fudged the
On Sun, Jan 4, 2015 at 1:22 PM, Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:
For Terry and anyone who followed the mainly Russian claims on “torsion
fields” many years ago, check out the last name in the second paragraph here
Doh!
Thank goodness word processors make it easy to edit your CV. Few
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