On Mon, Jul 29, 2013 at 9:54 PM, Chuck Sites <cbsit...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi All,  Wow!
>
>    I've been watching and thinking about the Delkcalion (cold fusion?)
> experiment, and wondered what you guys thought was actually happening there.
> It was a great demonstration.   That small device certainly seemed to get
> wildly hot. If H gas + some nano-NI powder generated that much heat, I
> wonder how you design the heat exchange system to maximize the transfer of
> heat to a constantly flowing fluid, that boils away to dry steam?  i think
> Defkcalion did a fantastic demonstration, but it leaves me asking more
> questions than it answers.
>
http://new.livestream.com/triwu2/Defkalion-US

Watch the video at the bottom, he goes into some detail about the
mechanism which deals with heat exchange.

Some more detail here:

http://iccf18.research.missouri.edu/files/day2/Protocol_and_test_results.pdf

> What are the by-products, where are the by-products and why can't we see the
> by-products?   I mean, where is the radiation, transmutations and changes in
> materials that would indicate a nuclear phenomena?  A power source this big
> should have some tell-tail signal left over if it is nuclear in origin.  A
> before/after EDAX would be icing on the cake for such a breakout
> demonstration.  As it is, it still seems like an amateur experiment.
>

I will agree that Mats (and Defkalion folks) are very brave to work
with this so casually.   Isn't anyone ever worried about these things
blowing up?

>
>

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