As a general observation, it could be said that many alternative energy
practitioners gravitate to LENR once they determine from thousands of null
results that anomalous gain is unlikely with any configuration of magnets,
magnetic gating, resonant circuits and so on. But the near misses, and the
2n
I was once working with a technician who had hooked up an L-C circuit
(without a transformer) and saw AC voltage gain. He was convinced that he
had an overunity invention. The voltage gain was outside of his
expectation. However, it was pointed out by someone with more experience
that the voltag
On Sun, Jul 17, 2016 at 9:27 AM, Jones Beene wrote:
No one has ever explained the apparent gain seen in the circuits of the
> late Arthur Manelas ...
I think you're referring to the device of Manelas's that ended up in Brian
Ahern's hands. Ahern's description sounds to me like some variant of
On 07/17/2016 12:00 PM, Bob Higgins wrote:
In such cases, it is really useful to simulate the system with a model
that is entirely without unknown physics and see how the model
compares with observation. If it predicts the same phenomena, you can
be pretty sure that the outcome was simply
Bob Higgins wrote:
In such cases, it is really useful to simulate the system with a model that is
entirely without unknown physics and see how the model compares with
observation. If it predicts the same phenomena, you can be pretty sure that
the outcome was simply outside your expectation. S
http://egooutpeters.blogspot.ro/2016/07/jul-17-2016-lenr-is-facts-of-nature-and.html
For this silent Sunday
Yours,
Peter
--
Dr. Peter Gluck
Cluj, Romania
http://egooutpeters.blogspot.com
A feature article in foreign policy.com (!)
http://foreignpolicy.com/2016/07/07/the-coldest-case-cold-fusion-eugene-mallove-mit-infinite-energy/
Jed Rothwell gets a mention
Floyd Sweets device worked, but it is aetheric as well as electromagnetic.
It has accounts of antigravity, freezing wires, and once when overloaded it
made a vortex sound...
Many of the more credible coils and magnets free energy devices have other
anomalous effects besides mere overunity.
And w
That's terribly depressing. Mostly accurate as far as I know.
- Jed
Thanks for the link.
On 07/17/2016 06:00 PM, a.ashfield wrote:
A feature article in foreign policy.com (!)
http://foreignpolicy.com/2016/07/07/the-coldest-case-cold-fusion-eugene-mallove-mit-infinite-energy/
Jed Rothwell gets a mention
.
On Sun, Jul 17, 2016 at 5:00 PM, a.ashfield wrote:
A feature article in foreign policy.com (!)
>
> http://foreignpolicy.com/2016/07/07/the-coldest-case-cold-fusion-eugene-mallove-mit-infinite-energy/
The author of the article is a professor of journalism at Princeton.
Eric
*this was published in EGO OUT on July 8 but ignored*
*3) A great paper about Gene MalloveThe Coldest CaseEugene Mallove gave up
everything to pursue the holy grail of nuclear energy. Did it cost him his
life? by David
Kushnerhttp://foreignpolicy.com/2016/07/07/the-coldest-case-cold-fusion-euge
my perspective on this sort of thing--
That was 2004. Over the next 11 years, the question of who killed Mallove
would lead Curtis down a path he never expected. Mallove, the detective
discovered, was one of the world’s most outspoken advocates for cold
fusion. “It’s science we
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