Mary Yugo <maryyu...@gmail.com> wrote:


> On Fri, Nov 18, 2011 at 9:29 AM, Joshua Cude <joshua.c...@gmail.com>wrote:
>
>> Right, because no one can explain:
>>
>> (1) why is the temperature so stable, requiring power stability of 1%
>>
>
The temperature is not stable. It fluctuates considerably, as you see in
the cooling loop data. People who believe in the stable do not understand
that water at one atmosphere does not get any hotter than ~100°C. When you
increase power, more water boils but the temperature does not go up. You
will see this in any grade school level science textbook. It is surprising
that adults do not know this.



> (2) how does he get an 8-fold increase in power transfer in a few minutes,
>> if the first-fold power increase took 2 hours.
>>
>
This question is nonsense. The reaction took a long time to initiate, but
once it got going it increased rapidly. With Fleischmann and Pons' original
experiments it took a week for the metal to load and reaction to begin, but
after that it sometimes increased very rapidly in a matter of minutes.



> Excellent questions.  Perhaps Jed Rothwell can address them?
>

Anyone can address them. The answers are obvious.

- Jed

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