thomas malloy
Mon, 31 Mar 2008 22:46:49 -0700
Jones Beene wrote:
Last I heard sodium was a Mill's Catalyst. This is also the first time I've heard that alkali metals attract hydrinos.Richard,OK, when you get through chuckling over it, expand on the thought. Aussies4) Solar hydrinos are created in the sun's corona and if they arrive in the solar wind, they will likely accumulate in the oceans of earth, and have an affinity for alkali metal ions. Unlike potassium, sodium is not a catalyst so it would only attract and not further shrink the hydrino - which is then poised to react with photoactivated chlorine.
BTW, when I talked to Mr. Kanzas he denied that his process produced any energy, do you believe that he was blowing smoke?
--- Get FREE High Speed Internet from USFamily.Net! -- http://www.usfamily.net/mkt-freepromo.html ---