Mike Carrell
Tue, 03 Jun 2008 17:38:09 -0700
----- Original Message ----- From: "OrionWorks" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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The engineering challenges as described by Mr. Carrell seem entirely realistic, and more importantly, doable from my POV. I have every faith that we simians are up to the challenge. Shoot! We've been to the Moon in back. It is one of the reasons I continue to suspect BLP may very well have finally skinned the rabbit despite PZ's strategically applied skepticism. However, and here's the catch, the development challenges BLP is about to embark on concern me deeply. In fact, I'd go so far as to say they concern me gravely. BLP claims that they anticipate having a prototype operational possibly before the end of 2010. Every instinctual fiber within my body tells me that this timetable will very likely turn out to be unrealistic at practically every corner they encounter. As Mr. Carrell has eluded, no one has ever attempted to manipulate this particular arrangement of chemistry in the fashion required - to make the BLP process self-regenerative. I gather there has never been a NEED to study and subsequently manipulate the chemistry in the manner required - until now. There's going to be a lot of learning and unavoidable mistakes made as engineers gain experience - painfully, slowly, one step at a time. I hope the difficulty of the challenges ahead have been made clear to BLP's key investors. I hope they have the capacity to appreciate how difficult (and potentially expensive) the initial challenge is likely to be. My fear is that key investors may begin to lose heart and begin withholding essential funding. I hope my concerns are mostly irrational and overblown.
No, Steven, your concerns are not irrational and overblown, for I have been saying essentially the same thing for some years, that the really tough part of the journey is ahead. In my corporate years I was in a Manufacturing Technology Lab, bridging between a world class research laboratory and the manufacturing plants. I have viewed close up three startups done by competent people using mostly familiar technology whose cost ran in the hundreds of millions back when that was real money. I have no close-up insight on the staff of BLP as to what they have actually done. I have no direct insight into just what is going on behind the curtain, but there is a lot of cheerful noise. BLP intends to hire a world class A&E firm to build a utility-class power plant. Such firms have in-depth engineering staffs used to large one-of projects. They can hire squads of consultants. The turbines, heat exchangers, are all catalog stuff. Large scale electrolysis units are also probably catalog stuff. The new part is the reaction chamber and the reconstitution process necessary to get an essentially continuous burn. I would expect several interation of this, working up to a megawatt power level. Then they can start selling power to the NJ PSE&G grid and harvesting hydrino hydrides for chemical development. When that can run stably for weeks, design can begin on the next, more efficient iteration. BLP will then be drowning in money as the realization spreads that here is solution to carbon footprints,. etc. and etc.
I don't think anyone will lose heart despite transitional problems.Mike Carrell