My dear Friends,
It's a bit of dead season for the E-cat and
for cold fusion (except Mitch's colloquium)
therefore I am thinking about the future
technologies -know-how problems and
development research. Still no perfect
E-cat experiment.
Anyway I am sending a new issue of
INFORMAVORE's SUNDAY
Terry - I did address this point about two months ago, and it should be in
the archives. My guess then was copper chloride was either missing,
under-applied or did not bind properly to the nickel, in the later
(nonworking) batch.
Besides nickel and palladium coating the beads, JP used copper
Now I think I am wrong. I forgot that higher speed makes bouncing more
frequent so the effect cancels out. But the horizontal effect is still
there. So it is still true that hotter gas in constant volume becomes
lighter. Unless something is happening at the walls.
David
On Sat, Jun 11, 2011 at
The link is broken.
Has this post been deleted too ?
2011/6/11 Akira Shirakawa shirakawa.ak...@gmail.com
Hello group,
To tell the truth there is nothing particularly relevant here, but have a
look at what I found with Google Alerts:
Does anyone know how to contact Lew Larsen? Please send me his e-mail
address or tell him to contact me.
- Jed
Dear Cousin
his address is: lewisglar...@gmail.com
peter
On Sun, Jun 12, 2011 at 9:39 PM, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:
Does anyone know how to contact Lew Larsen? Please send me his e-mail
address or tell him to contact me.
- Jed
--
Dr. Peter Gluck
Cluj, Romania
Got it. Thanks. Several people seem to know his address!
- Jed
How does it fly?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9U3xFu0MIdo
Harry
On 11-06-11 01:58 PM, David Jonsson wrote:
Hi
This obvious fact from hot air balloons and rising smoke is also the
case in constant volume. Just do the math if you can't see what I mean.
Imagine a ball on lying at rest in a box. This is equivalent of a cold
gas. All pressure from the ball
9 matches
Mail list logo