[Vo]:Mills : Solid State eCat ?
Ref: http://www.cleantechblog.com/2011/08/the-new-breed-of-energy-catalyzers-ready-for-commercialization.html *Lucky Saint ยท 37 weeks ago No. Take 2 copper disks size of a penny. Put a dent in one. Mix ultrafine magnesium hydride soft iron powder and nickel powder in equalportions. Make sure ALL ball milling, preparation and procedures arestrictly inert atmosphere and dry box manipulations. Compress a portionof the mix to a small pill which fits easily into the disk indentation.Seal the chamber, welding with jeweler's tools. Place reactor in asmall beaker with water. Place on top of induction coil heating unit.Cause the water to boil from heat induced by alternating magneticfield. Once boiling, turn off the induction heater. Keep adding wateras the boiling will continue by itself for ? years. Mine is stillboiling after over 5 yeaes.* Altermate Electromagnetic or RFG pulse controll?
Re: [Vo]:Mills : Solid State eCat ?
Load one ecat unit with hydrogen and leave an identical ecat unit unloaded and compare the temperature difference after electricity is applied. harry On Mon, Jul 2, 2012 at 1:08 PM, Harry Veeder wrote: > You would need control version that has same dimensions and electrical > inputs as the Ecat, but which lacks a nuclear active environment > (NAE). > > harry > > On Mon, Jul 2, 2012 at 2:10 AM, Patrick Ellul wrote: >> How would one measure COP in a "Solid State" e-cat? >> >> On Mon, Jul 2, 2012 at 7:03 AM, Alan Fletcher wrote: >>> >>> The New Solid State E-Cat >>> http://pesn.com/2012/06/30/9602121_Solid_State_E-Cat/ >>> >>> When first introduced to the world, Andrea Rossi's E-Cat required a flow >>> of water to remain stable, even at low temperatures. Now, he has developed a >>> new "solid state" high temperature model that is stable at temperatures even >>> higher than 600C -- with no cooling needed! >>> >> >> >> >> -- >> Patrick >> >> www.tRacePerfect.com >> The daily puzzle everyone can finish but not everyone can perfect! >> The quickest puzzle ever! >>
Re: [Vo]:Mills : Solid State eCat ?
You would need control version that has same dimensions and electrical inputs as the Ecat, but which lacks a nuclear active environment (NAE). harry On Mon, Jul 2, 2012 at 2:10 AM, Patrick Ellul wrote: > How would one measure COP in a "Solid State" e-cat? > > On Mon, Jul 2, 2012 at 7:03 AM, Alan Fletcher wrote: >> >> The New Solid State E-Cat >> http://pesn.com/2012/06/30/9602121_Solid_State_E-Cat/ >> >> When first introduced to the world, Andrea Rossi's E-Cat required a flow >> of water to remain stable, even at low temperatures. Now, he has developed a >> new "solid state" high temperature model that is stable at temperatures even >> higher than 600C -- with no cooling needed! >> > > > > -- > Patrick > > www.tRacePerfect.com > The daily puzzle everyone can finish but not everyone can perfect! > The quickest puzzle ever! >
Re: [Vo]:Mills : Solid State eCat ?
How would one measure COP in a "Solid State" e-cat? On Mon, Jul 2, 2012 at 7:03 AM, Alan Fletcher wrote: > The New Solid State E-Cat > http://pesn.com/2012/06/30/9602121_Solid_State_E-Cat/ > > When first introduced to the world, Andrea Rossi's E-Cat required a flow > of water to remain stable, even at low temperatures. Now, he has developed > a new "solid state" high temperature model that is stable at temperatures > even higher than 600C -- with no cooling needed! > > -- Patrick www.tRacePerfect.com The daily puzzle everyone can finish but not everyone can perfect! The quickest puzzle ever!
[Vo]:Mills : Solid State eCat ?
The New Solid State E-Cat http://pesn.com/2012/06/30/9602121_Solid_State_E-Cat/ When first introduced to the world, Andrea Rossi's E-Cat required a flow of water to remain stable, even at low temperatures. Now, he has developed a new "solid state" high temperature model that is stable at temperatures even higher than 600C -- with no cooling needed!