Jones,
Yeah, I love that it looks like it could have been made in a garage of spare plumbing parts. It has a much less sophisticated geometry than I expected too; seems too simple even compared to the MAHG I started to replicate (it also had a copper vessel).

Keeps life interesting; you are a much better speculator than I.
Ron

--On Wednesday, April 06, 2011 9:55 AM -0700 Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net> 
wrote:

-----Original Message-----
From: Ron Wormus

So what causes the "electromigration"? As far as I can see all he has in there 
are some
resistive  heaters.


Ron - Possibly it could be related to either low level magnetic fields or emf 
associated with the
heaters, or else galvanic corrosion between the iron and copper. Some of those 
fittings look like
cast iron. A cooper tube may actually run through the reactor itself - so there 
are many
possibilities.

Wow, gotta luv that the Rossi apparatus does work - apparently - but doesn't it 
just scream
"cheap"? Off the rack at K-Mart cheap...

Actually, that is one of the real beauties of it - to my warped mentality - 
getting the job done
adequately with the least investment.

And if he had used expensive stainless vacuum high-grade physics lab gear? - 
guess what, sport
fans - It probably would not have worked !

Seriously, I would be willing to bet that the copper migration is what makes it 
work. No kidding.

I cannot explain this stunning revelation now - until I get permission to forward 
the "defining
paper" which tells-the-tale - but as of now, it appears that the case has been 
cracked, so to
speak, and Pandora's secret is oozing out ...

Clue: no, it's not the Colonel Mustard with the lead pipe - but the paper's 
lead researcher is a
Polish alloy expert named Romanowski, and you want to look at Fig 9 on page 8 
...

Stay tuned,

Jones







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