Re: [Vo]:For your weekend distraction

2008-05-18 Thread Terry Blanton
No reference in this blog:

http://grad40.as.utexas.edu/grblog.php

Although, it is a predicted burst.  This certainly explains the concern:

http://www.azuritepress.com/New%20Comers/welcome.html

I have never heard of kelyontic science.

Terry

On Sat, May 17, 2008 at 6:48 PM, Horace Heffner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 On May 17, 2008, at 3:23 PM, Robin van Spaandonk wrote:

 What does G.R.B. stand for?

 (Great Radiation Burst?)

 http://imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/science/know_l1/bursts.html

 Obviously used by class IV civilizations to send code.  8^)

 Horace Heffner
 http://www.mtaonline.net/~hheffner/







[Vo]:RF at 13.56 MHz

2008-05-18 Thread Jones Beene
Some of the following is paraphrased from a commercial
site on Plasma Cleaning the RF process used for
cleaning semiconductor wafers, etc. via ion
excitation. 

Some of it is based on 'inside information' from an
associate who has worked with these systems in the
semiconductor industry, and who can be almost as
optimistic as this writer about 'expanding the
horizon'  at least when there are few 'red-flags' of
suspicion surrounding the claims ... (and consequently
cannot be really trusted ;-)

All of this is relevant to an improved Kanzius style
salt water burner, and also relevant to a merger of
several related concepts, including possibly LENR and
more likely the real hydrino (a short-lived
species). 

The gist of the evolving concept is to move quickly
beyond the simple and naive approach (i.e. RF being
applied to salt water). Almost everyone with expertise
in RF engineering believes that the RF coupling in
the Kanzius concept can be improved *greatly* by
moving from a cold liquid medium to a mixed-gas-plasma
medium- steam, water mist, oxygen, probably argon and
entrained salt ions, and possibly even utilizing a
closed-cycle reactor. More on that later.

When a gas absorbs electrical energy, its temperature
increases causing the ions to vibrate and rotate.
Dense liquids tend to reflect applied RF. That is the
gist of the coupling problem that Kanzius has now.

In an inert gas, such as argon, the excited ions can
bombard a 'dirty' surface (sandblast) and remove a
small amount of material. This is routinely done in
semiconductor manufacturing.

In the case of a reactive gas, such as oxygen or
chlorine, ionization leads to 'enhanced' chemical
reactions. For instance, the chemical reaction is
enhanced since the oxygen has been already converted
into ROS (reactive oxygen species). 

As a result, organic compounds and residues volatilize
and are removed or burned. Kanzius has shown actual
water dissociation, and therefore this finding creates
the situation where true closed-cycle combustion
becomes a distinct possibility IF (and only if) there
is gainfulness in the thermodynamics, due to hydrinos
or LENR of supra-chemical (ballotechnic) reactions.
More on that later.

Radio frequency (RF), microwaves, and alternating or
direct current or radioactive decay can all energize
gases and plasmas. There could be synergy in using
various combinations these inputs. 

Energetic species in gas plasma include ions,
electrons, radicals, metastable chemical
intermediates, and photons in visible and ultraviolet
(UV) range. All of these operate in the geometry where
the Casimir force is seen. Chlorine has extraordinary
photochemical excitability, and therein lies a
possible route to synergy. All of these variables are
why the news story from last year generated so much
broad enthusiasm, even though no claim for OU has been
made (officially). 

If there is really such a beast in fissix as the
supra-chemical reaction, then chlorine is the
easiest place to find it. This would be a non-nuclear
reaction where the excess energy comes from inner
electron orbitals (Mössbauer-like) and ultimately from
Casimir-ZPE (in the sense of the Dirac epo lattice). 

Caveat: There is evidence for supra-chemical and
ballotechnic reactions in the literature, but it is
not at all convincing to most experts. It is also
related to the alternative explanations for the excess
energy seen by Mills- that being a transitory species
of protium which shrinks, BUT then taps into
Casimir-ZPE to immediately revert, unlike the Mills
conception of stability.

History of Using 13.56 MHz

In the 1940s, coroners (pre CSI!) used diffusion
tubes, also known as ashers, as forensics tools.
Samples from a deceased body would be placed inside a
quartz diffusion tube and brought to temperatures
exceeding 1000 °C. A spectrometer would provide a
rough chemical analysis to determine whether poisoning
had occurred. However, early diffusion tubes had too
slow of a rise-time in temperature- thus the need to
add an RF component which couples well to a gas
stream.

Since the allowable frequency standard (from the FCC)
for RF equipment is/was in the range of 13–14 MHz,
this became the target range for RF amps - purely by
default. Early on, an inventor named Royal Rife
pioneered RF for medical uses (controversial). Kanzius
and Roy most definitely should have credited Rife with
the basic idea (for Cancer treatment) and they should
be faulted for this oversight, as well as lack of
attribution to many others in their patent claims. 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Rife

For decades, RF ashers and assorted thermal units were
sold to the medical and forensic industry, but the
demand remained small. Then came chips and RFID and
the demand has skyrocketed for RF amplifiers in this
range.

Semiconductor Industry

In the 1960s, process engineers became interested in
ashers. They needed an alternative way to remove the
photoresist from wafers. Until then, they'd been using
a dangerous 

[Vo]:Re: Britain reveals UFO documents

2008-05-18 Thread Michel Jullian
Hi Robin,

Good point about the desirability of ubiquitous EV chargers in parking lots, 
they would make the limited range of existing batteries acceptable. Payment by 
a vehicle bound smart card as you suggest would make the scheme quite practical.

How about making this wireless: induction chargers buried under the 'chargking' 
places, and a get 1 kWh (or whatever) button in the car, which you would just 
have to hit before going shopping. Delivery could also be automatic, depending 
on your car's automatic buying settings (allow or not, acceptable kWh price...) 
and on the battery level (e.g. auto-buy only if not enough juice left to get 
back home safely).

Michel

P.S. Since no-one seems to have bit yet... do tell us more about that 2k COP 
reactor design please!


- Original Message - 
From: Robin van Spaandonk [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Sent: Saturday, May 17, 2008 12:17 AM
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Britain reveals UFO documents


In reply to  OrionWorks's message of Fri, 16 May 2008 08:46:51 -0500:
Hi,
[snip]
hotcakes off of Wall-Mart's shelves? Will I someday have a magic
electric box the size of a cloths hamper lurking down in the corner of
my basement supplying my household with up to 25kw of continuous
electricity?

I already have the design for the box, but no one seems to be interested in
helping me construct a prototype. BTW, in it's current form, it wont be standing
in your basement, though a replacement for your local electric sub-station is
not out of the question. Maximum theoretical COP allowed by the process itself
is 2356, though there will be losses incurred in a real device.

No radioisotopes produced, and no neutrons. This is a clean reactor. Primary
fuel is Deuterium.

 Will gas soon once again sell for less than twenty five
cents a gallon?

Let's hope not - we would never see the end of noxious city air. ;)

I would prefer bettery powered vehicles recharged anywhere for next to nothing
from a grid supplied by fusion power. I envisage drive-in style parking lots
at supermarkets, where instead of a speaker hanging on a post, there is a cable
the one plugs into ones vehicle while shopping, and one drops a coin in the slot
to pay for the power. Should provide a nice extra source of income for the
supermarkets, and hence they should spring up all over the place.
Rapid charging via high voltage low current. Specially insulated connector
normally has no power connected to it. This is only turned on once a proper
connection with the vehicle has been established (built in (encrypted?)
fool-proof signal switch), and the coin has been dropped in the slot.
In fact if everyone has their own encrypted code (PKE - built into the
vehicle), then no coin is needed, and one's account can be charged directly.
This also prevents misuse. 
[snip]
Regards,

Robin van Spaandonk

The shrub is a plant.



Re: [Vo]:Re: Britain reveals UFO documents

2008-05-18 Thread R C Macaulay

Howdy Michel,
Yes, I am waiting too, for the 2k COP info.
Regarding battery chargers, I suspect the trend will lean toward  exchange 
plug in batteries  easily remove-install stations and moble services set up 
for this purpose.




Michel wrote,
P.S. Since no-one seems to have bit yet... do tell us more about that 2k 
COP reactor design please!




Re: [Vo]:RF at 13.56 MHz

2008-05-18 Thread R C Macaulay

Howdy Jones,

Fascinating thoughts. My file size is increasing. I keep seeing an O3- O6 
diozone theme lurking behind the scene. hmm

Toying with fluorides in lieu of chlorine could take year off one' life.
I have a recent experience with ferrous chloride used in water treating. 
This stuff can take the nail polish off my fingernails.
Richard 



Re: [Vo]:Re: Britain reveals UFO documents

2008-05-18 Thread Robin van Spaandonk
In reply to  R C Macaulay's message of Sun, 18 May 2008 20:44:06 -0500:
Hi,
[snip]
Regarding battery chargers, I suspect the trend will lean toward  exchange 
plug in batteries  easily remove-install stations and moble services set up 
for this purpose.
[snip]
If batteries are used that can be 80% recharged in 5 minutes, then they could be
almost completely recharged while the driver was in the supermarket. Most people
spend more than 5 minutes shopping anyway. However that requires the transfer of
a lot of energy in a very short period, i.e. how recharging power. Because one
doesn't want to use expensive and awkward heavy cables, this high power also
needs to be low current. The implication is that it needs to also be high
voltage.

Michel suggested power transfer from a loop in the ground, but I could foresee
problems with this. e.g. how do you know you won't also be supplying power to
the car in the parking slot next to yours at the same time?

Regards,

Robin van Spaandonk

The shrub is a plant.



Re: [Vo]:Re: Britain reveals UFO documents

2008-05-18 Thread Robin van Spaandonk
In reply to  Michel Jullian's message of Sun, 18 May 2008 17:08:24 +0200:
Hi Michel,
[snip]
P.S. Since no-one seems to have bit yet... do tell us more about that 2k COP 
reactor design please!
[snip]
A prototype could in my estimation be constructed and tested by a team of a few
people in about a year. The materials and equipment requirements are trivial. If
you have ever visited my web site, or followed my posts here, then you already
have a fair idea what it is based on. I just took the basic principles a step
further and incorporated them into a device that may or may not work. If it
doesn't, well it won't have cost a great deal, so little is lost. 
If it does, then I suspect that everyone on this forum already knows what it
would mean for the planet.

Regards,

Robin van Spaandonk

The shrub is a plant.