Re: [Vo]:WSJ blog: calling all cold fusion inventors

2009-05-13 Thread Terry Blanton
On Tue, May 12, 2009 at 8:26 PM, grok g...@resist.ca wrote: Whatever do you mean (rolls eyes. Thinx of Hitler). How would you classify Robin Hood, politically? Terry

[Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Duncan “Cold Fusion” Video Mystery

2009-05-13 Thread Terry Blanton
It means they can ax him any time. He does not want to cause controversy. He is also probably not very well off financially. http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-an-adjunct-professor.htm Terry On Tue, May 12, 2009 at 10:43 PM, Steven Krivit stev...@newenergytimes.com wrote: Duncan Cold Fusion

[Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Duncan “Cold Fusion” Video Mystery

2009-05-13 Thread OrionWorks
From Terry: It means they can ax him any time.  He does not want to cause controversy.  He is also probably not very well off financially. http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-an-adjunct-professor.htm Now, it gets really interesting. The sense of outrage many could be feeling may need to be

[Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Duncan “Cold Fusion” Video Mystery

2009-05-13 Thread Terry Blanton
I know a few adjuncts. Most are bitter but cautious; although, they may have been on staff for many years. Terry 2009/5/13 OrionWorks svj.orionwo...@gmail.com: From Terry: It means they can ax him any time.  He does not want to cause controversy.  He is also probably not very well off

[Vo]:UDD - Big Story

2009-05-13 Thread Jones Beene
Check out Slashdot - or the SciNews feeds today- big story with no details: Ultra Dense Deuterium It is said to be much denser than metallic deuterium, where the bond distance would be 153 pm (1.53 angstroms) or 2.9 times the Bohr radius of the atom. Even metallic hydrogen has a density of

Re: [Vo]:UDD - Big Story

2009-05-13 Thread Terry Blanton
Here's the abstract: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL_udi=B6VND-4VP66CS-4_user=10_rdoc=1_fmt=_orig=search_sort=dview=c_acct=C50221_version=1_urlVersion=0_userid=10md5=ec9093be8b72a328c121a8092c95ac67 http://snipurl.com/hy1j9 On Wed, May 13, 2009 at 10:32 AM, Jones Beene

Re: [Vo]:Latest from Mylow

2009-05-13 Thread Horace Heffner
On May 12, 2009, at 4:12 PM, Kyle Mcallister wrote: --- Harry Veeder hvee...@ncf.ca wrote: Kyle, I have a construction suggestion. If you haven't already thought of this, try using double sided tape to position the rotor magnets instead of glue. Have to remember that for future. On

Re: [Vo]:Latest from Mylow

2009-05-13 Thread Stephen A. Lawrence
Horace Heffner wrote: On May 12, 2009, at 4:12 PM, Kyle Mcallister wrote: --- Harry Veeder hvee...@ncf.ca wrote: Kyle, I have a construction suggestion. If you haven't already thought of this, try using double sided tape to position the rotor magnets instead of glue. Have to

Re: [Vo]:WSJ blog: calling all cold fusion inventors

2009-05-13 Thread grok
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 As the smoke cleared, Terry Blanton hohlr...@gmail.com mounted the barricade and roared out: On Tue, May 12, 2009 at 8:26 PM, grok g...@resist.ca wrote: Whatever do you mean (rolls eyes. Thinx of Hitler). How would you classify Robin Hood,

Re: [Vo]:Latest from Mylow

2009-05-13 Thread Horace Heffner
On May 13, 2009, at 8:32 AM, Stephen A. Lawrence wrote: Also per Wikipedia, the Curie point for iron is 768 C. That's over 500 C margin between the hot melt temp and the Curie point, so one would guess that hot gluing the magnets is probably harmless. The Curie point of iron is

[Vo]:[OT] Cyanoacrylate activator: Where did it go?

2009-05-13 Thread Stephen A. Lawrence
A couple decades ago I was, for a brief time, a (not very good) hardware design engineer. In the lab, we used cyanoacrylate to glue parts to boards, and we used spray bottles of activator to harden the stuff. And so I learned that Krazy glue and related products, which normally only stick well

Re: [Vo]:Latest from Mylow

2009-05-13 Thread Stephen A. Lawrence
Horace Heffner wrote: On May 13, 2009, at 8:32 AM, Stephen A. Lawrence wrote: Also per Wikipedia, the Curie point for iron is 768 C. That's over 500 C margin between the hot melt temp and the Curie point, so one would guess that hot gluing the magnets is probably harmless. The

Re: [Vo]:[OT] Cyanoacrylate activator: Where did it go?

2009-05-13 Thread leaking pen
try searching cyanoacrylate accelerator On Wed, May 13, 2009 at 10:46 AM, Stephen A. Lawrence sa...@pobox.com wrote: A couple decades ago I was, for a brief time, a (not very good) hardware design engineer.  In the lab, we used cyanoacrylate to glue parts to boards, and we used spray bottles

Re: [Vo]:[OT] Cyanoacrylate activator: Where did it go?

2009-05-13 Thread Stephen A. Lawrence
leaking pen wrote: try searching cyanoacrylate accelerator Sigh... OK, yes, I should have done that to start with. Actually I rather hoped there was some interesting tale behind the disappearance which someone here would know. So it appears the stuff is still available mail order, from some

Re: [Vo]:[OT] Cyanoacrylate activator: Where did it go?

2009-05-13 Thread leaking pen
hunh. I've seen it at craft stores, but not hardware. On Wed, May 13, 2009 at 11:17 AM, Stephen A. Lawrence sa...@pobox.com wrote: leaking pen wrote: try searching cyanoacrylate accelerator Sigh... OK, yes, I should have done that to start with.  Actually I rather hoped there was some

Re: [Vo]:[OT] Cyanoacrylate activator: Where did it go?

2009-05-13 Thread Horace Heffner
On May 13, 2009, at 10:17 AM, Stephen A. Lawrence wrote: No explanation, and none of the replies mentioned any explanation; just a statement of what I've already observed. The partial disappearance could be due to the fact it can no longer be shipped by USPS air mail? Best regards,

[Vo]:Calculate the torque from the stress tensor

2009-05-13 Thread David Jonsson
Hi Can someone explain to me how to calculate the torque from the stress tensor? David David Jonsson, Sweden, phone callto:+46703000370

RE: [Vo]:[OT] Cyanoacrylate activator: Where did it go?

2009-05-13 Thread Rick Monteverde
Fellow time traveller: Went to the hardware chain store here the other day to get a bag of plaster. They didn't have any, and the clerk wasn't even really sure what it was and got suspicious - asked what I wanted it for. I should have told her I was a terrorist and I was going to jump on a subway

Re: [Vo]:Calculate the torque from the stress tensor

2009-05-13 Thread David Jonsson
On Wed, May 13, 2009 at 9:36 PM, David Jonsson davidjonssonswe...@gmail.com wrote: Hi Can someone explain to me how to calculate the torque from the stress tensor? It seems to be this simple Torque = T12 - T21 For a two dimensional tensor T= T11 T12 T21 T22 Right? Now I will do

Re: [Vo]:[OT] Cyanoacrylate activator: Where did it go?

2009-05-13 Thread grok
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 As the smoke cleared, Rick Monteverde r...@highsurf.com mounted the barricade and roared out: Fellow time traveller: Went to the hardware chain store here the other day to get a bag of plaster. They didn't have any, and the clerk wasn't even

Re: [Vo]:Calculate the torque from the stress tensor

2009-05-13 Thread Stephen A. Lawrence
What you just said sounds right, but what you've actually got looks to me like the torque per unit volume. I think you need to integrate that over a volume to get the actual torque acting on that volume. OTOH if that value is nonzero then your object is spinning up -- it's not just sitting

RE: [Vo]:[OT] Cyanoacrylate activator: Where did it go?

2009-05-13 Thread Rick Monteverde
Plaster of paris. Sounds European and vaguely seditious, I guess. - R. -Original Message- From: leaking pen [mailto:itsat...@gmail.com] Sent: Wednesday, May 13, 2009 10:16 AM To: r...@highsurf.com Subject: Re: [Vo]:[OT] Cyanoacrylate activator: Where did it go? plaster of paris

Re: [Vo]:[OT] Cyanoacrylate activator: Where did it go?

2009-05-13 Thread grok
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 As the smoke cleared, Rick Monteverde r...@highsurf.com mounted the barricade and roared out: Plaster of paris. Sounds European and vaguely seditious, I guess. - R. And Paris is where they have all those there revolutions -- and (GASP!) them

Re: [Vo]:Calculate the torque from the stress tensor

2009-05-13 Thread Stephen A. Lawrence
I think, for a stationary shaft... Assume you're given a stationary shaft lying along the x axis. Assume further that it's under torsion. To find the applied torque, I think you would want to integrate R x (Txy, Txz) over the surface of a cut through the shaft, where R is the radius vector

Re: [Vo]:UDD - Big Story

2009-05-13 Thread mixent
In reply to Jones Beene's message of Wed, 13 May 2009 07:32:15 -0700: Hi, See also my previous post http://www.mail-archive.com/vortex-l%40eskimo.com/msg31710.html. Check out Slashdot - or the SciNews feeds today- big story with no details: Ultra Dense Deuterium It is said to be much denser

[Vo]:Vortices Redux

2009-05-13 Thread grok
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 FYI: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VORTEX_projects - -- grok. - -- Build the North America-wide General Strike. TODO el poder a los consejos y las comunas. TOUT le pouvoir aux conseils et communes. ALL power to the councils and communes.

[Vo]:Apparent replication of Mylow's magnetic motor

2009-05-13 Thread Harry Veeder
Mylow (and his twin brother) demonstrate the motor with six bar magnets: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-_KQ8tldXnY ylow's instrutional videos: http://www.youtube.com/user/magneticmotor1 Rick Serling and Rick Friedrich demonstratea replicationwith three bar magnets:

[Vo]:Apparent replication of Mylow's magnetic motor

2009-05-13 Thread Harry Veeder
*typos corrected* Mylow (and his twin brother) demonstrate the motor with six bar magnets: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-_KQ8tldXnY Mylow's instructional videos: http://www.youtube.com/user/magneticmotor1 Rick Sterling and Rick Friedrich demonstrate a replication with three bar magnets:

Re: [Vo]:Apparent replication of Mylow's magnetic motor

2009-05-13 Thread Kyle Mcallister
--- Harry Veeder hvee...@ncf.ca wrote: - Mylow (and his twin brother) demonstrate the motor with six bar magnets: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-_KQ8tldXnY Watching this with my wife now. Something about the video seems odd. I cannot put my finger on it,

Re: [Vo]:Apparent replication of Mylow's magnetic motor

2009-05-13 Thread Harry Veeder
Sorry! My mistake again. The name is John Bedini and not John Sterling. Harry Mylow (and his twin brother) demonstrate the motor with six bar magnets: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-_KQ8tldXnY Mylow's instructional videos: http://www.youtube.com/user/magneticmotor1 John Sterling

Re: [Vo]:Apparent replication of Mylow's magnetic motor

2009-05-13 Thread Harry Veeder
- Original Message - From: Kyle Mcallister kyle_mcallis...@yahoo.com Date: Wednesday, May 13, 2009 8:36 pm Subject: Re: [Vo]:Apparent replication of Mylow's magnetic motor --- Harry Veeder hvee...@ncf.ca wrote: -Mylow (and his twin brother)