Maybe hydrinos improve heat transfer?  They should carry more energy in a 
"smaller" volume effectively increasing the internal surface area. Just because
We never see them at STP doesn't mean they can't exist as a heated plasma 
inside the reactor.
Fran

From: Jed Rothwell [mailto:jedrothw...@gmail.com]
Sent: Monday, April 18, 2011 3:26 PM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: EXTERNAL: Re: [Vo]:Heat transfer in a water heater and nuclear plant

Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net<mailto:jone...@pacbell.net>> wrote:

Thus there is at least a 1000:1 error in that anecdotal appraisal, which is not 
a surprise, given how much of an emotional stake seems to be involved.


You can appraise any electrical hot water heater and see that it transfers heat 
at a higher rate than the Rossi device does at 16 kW. This is not anecdotal. It 
is in published specifications.

The only emotional error here is on your side. Levi, Kullander and the others 
are using industry-standard techniques and instruments. For some reason you 
believe these instruments and techniques have produced an error by a factor of 
1000. You cannot tell us which of the 4 parameters might be wrong by such a 
gigantic factor, but you are sure this is the case, based on an analysis which 
also proves that electric teapots do not work.

This is irrational.

If you doubt that a teapot can transfer ~0.019 kW/cm^2, I suggest you try this 
yourself. Just measure the size of it, and plug it in. This is not "anecdotal." 
It is as far from being anecdotal as an observation can be, since anyone can 
confirm it. Instead of waving your hands and pretending that calorimetry does 
not work, I suggest you try it.

- Jed

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