Jed, you have no idea what other people think. The pipe you are showing there has nothing to do with the plant. I was working with pipes in plants when you were stll in the kindergarten, you say too many inept things loud. I remember when you told the first time - getting no other explnation for the moronity with the hal full pipes than that the flowmeter was in the grqvity retiurn pipe- but I bet you have no digram and I bet the flowmeter is not on that pipe. You are just defending a long ago lost position and impossible idea.
You do ot respect the rules of professionality and it is very difficult to discuss with you. I will discuss again when you show the diagram, OK? I fear you are really believing what you say, lying is more sane. peter On Fri, Feb 17, 2017 at 9:10 PM, Jed Rothwell <jedrothw...@gmail.com> wrote: > a.ashfield <a.ashfi...@verizon.net> wrote: > > >> I rather liked Rossi's comment. Discussing the flowmeter on the blogs >> before the full information is released in court is about as useful as >> discussing the sex of angels. >> > > That is bullshit. We have Rossi's data. We have detailed information on > this flowmeter, including the manual. These conclusions are inescapable -- > > The pump is far too big for this application. A pump that registers 36 > times per day is absurd. > > The flow data is impossibly regular, as is the other data. > > The flow data shows 36,000 kg/day and high heat on days when *Rossi > himself reported the reactor was turned off*. Would you like to explain > that miracle? How much "full information" do we need to know that's > impossible? > > The pumps that feed the reactors cannot move as much water as claimed. > > The manual warns you not to use it in a partially empty pipe. > > The flowmeter is 80 mm in diameter (3"). The gravity return capacity of a > 3" pipe is 140 gpm: > > http://www.slideshare.net/raju175/water-flow-pipe-sizes > > Even assuming Rossi's flow rate was accurate (which is physically > impossible), Rossi reported the flow was 6 gpm, which is far less than the > pipe capacity, so the pipe would be mostly empty. Therefore the flow meter > cannot possibly work. > > A mostly empty gravity return pipe looks like this: > > http://benfranklinplumberhouston.com/images/blog/plumber-houston- > sewer-line-cleaning.jpg > > Peter Gluck believes no such thing exists, but anyone who has used pipes > and pumps will know this is how it looks. > > - Jed > > -- Dr. Peter Gluck Cluj, Romania http://egooutpeters.blogspot.com