Mary, I seriously doubt that the RF generator is being used for inductive heating.
We obviously don't have an explanation as to the exact effect the RFG is having, but if it is having an effect, then it's likely not for direct heating. a few possibilities are, the 'breathing' that McKubre refers to in the recently posted video (i.e., forced, oscillatory mass movement of protons into and out of the metal lattice to achieve high loading ratios), OR, to generate very high E-fields between the Ni tubercles. or ?. -m From: Mary Yugo [mailto:maryyu...@gmail.com] Sent: Tuesday, December 06, 2011 10:07 AM To: vortex-l@eskimo.com Subject: Re: [Vo]: Of Rydberg and Radiofrequencies... On Tue, Dec 6, 2011 at 10:02 AM, Mark Iverson-ZeroPoint <zeropo...@charter.net> wrote: In addition, the RF would have a near instantaneous effect, whereas Mary's suggestion would have a very significant time-lag. thus, as Axil pointed out, a much greater likelihood of runaway. It's doubtful that Rossi exhibited anything that would have enough RF power to melt down the core in all the E-cats in the megawatt plant at once. Where would he store that much power? Anyway, wouldn't stopping the coolant flow be the best way to melt down a runaway core? The more one looks at the concept of a "safety heater", especially one that runs at appreciable power levels during most supposedly exothermic runs, the worse it smells.