Re: [Vo]:Rubidium-87 as an ideal alkali for LENR

2016-02-01 Thread Eric Walker
On Mon, Feb 1, 2016 at 12:49 PM, Jones Beene wrote: LOL! Well, in a game of “who do you trust” follow the buck, and it is > looking like someone with strong motivation was knee-deep in deception; and > sadly that hasn’t changed… kinda like the “public demo (by invitation > only)” nonsense of last

RE: [Vo]:Rubidium-87 as an ideal alkali for LENR

2016-02-01 Thread Jones Beene
From: Eric Walker Here is the paper I was looking for, also by Bush and Eagleton: http://www.lenr-canr.org/acrobat/EPRIproceedinga.pdf#page=198 It seems that, unlike Bush and Eagleton, Mills did not detect calcium. But Bush and Eagleton

Re: [Vo]:Rubidium-87 as an ideal alkali for LENR

2016-02-01 Thread Eric Walker
Hi Jones, On Mon, Feb 1, 2016 at 10:39 AM, Jones Beene wrote: > R. T. BUSH and R. D. EAGLETON, “Experiments Supporting the Transmission > Resonance > Model for Cold Fusion in Light Water: I. Correlation of Isotopic and Elemental > Evidence with Excess Heat,” Proc. 3rd Int. Conf. Cold Fusion, Na

RE: [Vo]:Rubidium-87 as an ideal alkali for LENR

2016-02-01 Thread Jones Beene
From: Eric Walker * I don't know whether Mills is avoiding disclosing testing done with rubidium or not. But I suspect that if he is still using potassium, he is seeing induced beta decay of the potassium, and that it is not more complex than this. * There was an interesting paper

Re: [Vo]:Rubidium-87 as an ideal alkali for LENR

2016-01-31 Thread Eric Walker
On Fri, Jan 29, 2016 at 2:56 PM, Jones Beene wrote: The answer to that could lie in induced radioactivity. Mills is > fully-invested in a non-nuclear explanation for thermal gain, so he tends > to avoid anything nuclear. He avoids all talk of nuclear energy like the > plague. Potassium is slightl

[Vo]:Rubidium-87 as an ideal alkali for LENR

2016-01-29 Thread Jones Beene
Rubidium sounds exotic and Sci-Fi, but it is not rare - actually more abundant than copper on earth, yet it is hardly well-known in LENR. There are a number of reasons for that. Cost for one. It requires special handling as well. Notably, rubidium is mildly radioactive in an unusual way - with a l