Re: [Vo]:Krivit takes a hard line on Rossi

2013-03-01 Thread Jouni Valkonen
On 28 February 2013 19:01, Brad Lowe ecatbuil...@gmail.com wrote: My confidence level in Rossi has gone from 90% down to less than 5%. I would recommend to drop your confidence level to 0 %. I'm even putting a 10kw of solar panels on my roof-- a technology I had hoped would be made

Re: [Vo]:Russian meteor coincidence odds

2013-03-01 Thread ChemE Stewart
My theory on Tunguska. 1) The object exploded over Earth just like the recent Meteor did in Russia, leveling millions of trees. Good article here: http://www.qsl.net/w5www/tunguska.html 2) The area was covered with high traces of iridium, which is rare on the Earth's surface.

Re: [Vo]:Russian meteor coincidence odds

2013-03-01 Thread James Bowery
That's a bad interpretation. I could have used the word generation to avoid such an interpretation of lifetime but I wanted to have a longer span to have conservatively large odds of witnessing the event. We'll have to either update our understanding of the statistics of these events quite

RE: [Vo]:Krivit takes a hard line on Rossi

2013-03-01 Thread Chris Zell
I have some friends in Canada who talk about their experience with health care there. It is not as bad as some right wing types would have it - but it still can be frightening. Seeing a specialist or getting an operation can be a far greater wait than what most would experience in the US.

[Vo]:first experience with Li batteries

2013-03-01 Thread fznidarsic
I found a bike kit (magic pie) with a 1000 watt electric motor and 40 volt 10 amp hour lithium ion batteries. I got the 1000 watt motor, not for speed, but to take big me up a hill. It will go 30 MPH, way to fast for a bike. The motorized wheel and the rack mount battery are heavy. My bike

[Vo]:Feeding Stewart

2013-03-01 Thread Terry Blanton
You must be right: http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/americas/05/31/honduras.storm.emergency/index.html

Re: [Vo]:Feeding Stewart

2013-03-01 Thread Edmund Storms
This picture does not look real. Note that the aerial view and the ground view do not match. Ed On Mar 1, 2013, at 10:50 AM, Terry Blanton wrote: You must be right: http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/americas/05/31/honduras.storm.emergency/index.html

Re: [Vo]:Krivit takes a hard line on Rossi

2013-03-01 Thread Harry Veeder
America has the best health care in the world, according to the Republican media machine...so this must be irrelevant...right? Harry On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 10:13 PM, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote: OrionWorks - Steven Vincent Johnson orionwo...@charter.net wrote: He should

Re: [Vo]:Krivit takes a hard line on Rossi

2013-03-01 Thread Harry Veeder
In the end you can buy the best health care in the world if you are a wealthy Canadian, American, Brit etc... Harry On Fri, Mar 1, 2013 at 9:34 AM, Chris Zell chrisz...@wetmtv.com wrote: I have some friends in Canada who talk about their experience with health care there. It is not as bad as

Re: [Vo]:Russian meteor coincidence odds

2013-03-01 Thread Jouni Valkonen
James, I think that you should also consider that 2014 Mars comet flyby that is once in hundred million years event especially if it is going to hit the planet. Odd coincidence or is it just about pushing the Earth's space program ahead! If you have not yet read this Landis paper, I would

Re: [Vo]:Russian meteor coincidence odds

2013-03-01 Thread James Bowery
I'm overwhelmed by just the 16 hour span of 2 rare-event coincidence and am loathe to incorporate more as both a lot of work to validate and as well as unnecessary to already put me in a state of mind that I'd rather not deal with given the need to pay rent. On Fri, Mar 1, 2013 at 12:36 PM, Jouni

RE: EXTERNAL: Re: [Vo]:Explaining Cold fusion -IV

2013-03-01 Thread Roarty, Francis X
There was a simulation cited here previously where the gas atoms all start to move in lockstep motion once the lattice is sufficiently loaded which effectively means the motion of the bulk gas population becomes heavily linked. From: Eric Walker [mailto:eric.wal...@gmail.com] Sent: Friday,

Re: [Vo]:Krivit takes a hard line on Rossi

2013-03-01 Thread Alain Sepeda
it is not the echo I have, more the opposite. of course maybe the difference is how wealthy is the tester... 2013/3/1 Harry Veeder hveeder...@gmail.com America has the best health care in the world, according to the Republican media machine...so this must be irrelevant...right? Harry

[Vo]:FYI: Some papers of interest...

2013-03-01 Thread MarkI-ZeroPoint
FYI: Some papers of interest. but I don't have access to these journals. Perhaps preprints are at arXiv? Exotic physics with slow neutrons W. Michael Snow http://www.physicstoday.org/resource/1/phtoad/v66/i3/p50_s1 Sensitive experiments with low-energy neutrons are helping to unravel

Re: [Vo]:Feeding Stewart

2013-03-01 Thread mixent
In reply to Terry Blanton's message of Fri, 1 Mar 2013 12:50:43 -0500: Hi, [snip] You must be right: http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/americas/05/31/honduras.storm.emergency/index.html Why doesn't the hole go right on through the planet releasing a magma gusher? Regards, Robin van Spaandonk

Re: [Vo]:Feeding Stewart

2013-03-01 Thread Terry Blanton
On Fri, Mar 1, 2013 at 3:54 PM, mix...@bigpond.com wrote: Why doesn't the hole go right on through the planet releasing a magma gusher? Methinks the tunnel was sealed by whatever produced the bore. It awaits the string which will add the Earthbead to a titan child's necklace.

Re: [Vo]:Feeding Stewart

2013-03-01 Thread Jed Rothwell
By coincidence there is a nightmarish news story from Florida about a sinkhole: Fla. Man Feared Dead After Disappearing Into Massive Sinkhole http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2013/03/01/florida_sinkhole_brandon_man_disappears_into_sinkhole_from_his_bedroom.html The guy was in bed when the

Re: [Vo]:Russian meteor coincidence odds

2013-03-01 Thread Harry Veeder
A video of a man hit by lightning twice...wow! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Qr39-pbSqA but analysis reveals the video is fake. :-( Harry

Re: [Vo]:Feeding Stewart

2013-03-01 Thread ChemE Stewart
Many enter into a 2-body orbit with the Earth's center of mass around a barycenter. If their orbits pop up in the ocean, they create a low pressure disturbance in the atmosphere and slowly work their way towards the sinkhole over the next few months. Just like those elliptical flux tubes on the

Re: EXTERNAL: Re: [Vo]:Explaining Cold fusion -IV

2013-03-01 Thread Kevin O'Malley
Here's a pretty good animation. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SoiteXBb1mAfeature=player_embedded About 3:40 into the animation. I found it at Superwaves's site http://ideasorlando.com/ideas/news/ideas-creates-animation-for-new-scientific-breakthrough-featured-on-cbs-60-minutes/ When these

Re: EXTERNAL: Re: [Vo]:Explaining Cold fusion -IV

2013-03-01 Thread Jed Rothwell
Kevin O'Malley kevmol...@gmail.com wrote: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SoiteXBb1mAfeature=player_embedded About 3:40 into the animation. I found it at Superwaves's site That is a good animation. I believe all of the claims up to 3:40 are based on conventional electrochemistry. At that

[Vo]:Proton radius in question, after 3 years the textbooks may need to be corrected...

2013-03-01 Thread MarkI-ZeroPoint
This might tie in to what Jones has been saying in a number of vortex postings. Is the radius of a proton wrong? http://phys.org/news/2013-02-textbook-radius-proton-wrong.html Apparently after 3 years now, they still cannot find an error in the data which suggests that the textbooks are

Re: [Vo]:Proton radius in question, after 3 years the textbooks may need to be corrected...

2013-03-01 Thread Harry Veeder
It will be most interesting if they find through further measurements the proton radius depends on whether muons or electrons are used in the measurement. harry On Fri, Mar 1, 2013 at 7:46 PM, MarkI-ZeroPoint zeropo...@charter.net wrote: This might tie in to what Jones has been saying in a

Re: [Vo]:Proton radius in question, after 3 years the textbooks may need to be corrected...

2013-03-01 Thread Harry Veeder
BTW, is this actually a challenge for QED theory, or does it mean that a closer study of QED theory predicts the new result, i.e. the proton radius will vary with the presence of muons or electrons? harry On Fri, Mar 1, 2013 at 9:54 PM, Harry Veeder hveeder...@gmail.com wrote: It will be most

Re: [Vo]:D or H loading...and other questions..

2013-03-01 Thread mixent
In reply to DJ Cravens's message of Tue, 26 Feb 2013 07:48:31 -0700: Hi D2, [snip] There are also loaded wire samples that are part of “tank circuits” that continue to give electrical currents (in the picowatt region) for months. This interests me. Could you provide the schematic of the

Re: [Vo]:D or H loading...and other questions..

2013-03-01 Thread mixent
In reply to Jones Beene's message of Tue, 26 Feb 2013 07:48:03 -0800: Hi, [snip] Suggestion: What about testing the thrust of a known flow-rate of H2 + O2 against the thrust of the same flow-rate - but with the only difference being that the H2 has been run through a catalyzer tube, immediately

[Vo]:RE: Proton radius in question, after 3 years the textbooks may need to be corrected...

2013-03-01 Thread Jones Beene
Mark, I've been focusing on mass variation, not radius - but your point that textbook values for the other physical properties of protons are almost as flakey, stands. Mass of the proton, historically, was measured at different values in different countries using different techniques, and

Re: [Vo]:D or H loading...and other questions..

2013-03-01 Thread mixent
In reply to Paul Breed's message of Tue, 26 Feb 2013 08:36:21 -0800: Hi Paul, [snip] explosives- ... That was not really my question. My question was more of the did anyone get an unexpected explosion and then discontinue the work The thought being that if you ever get the environment

Re: [Vo]:RE: Proton radius in question, after 3 years the textbooks may need to be corrected...

2013-03-01 Thread Terry Blanton
I have a question. Really two. Would it be more likely that a proton could capture a positron than an electron? Would the result survive as a neutron?

Re: [Vo]:RE: Proton radius in question, after 3 years the textbooks may need to be corrected...

2013-03-01 Thread mixent
In reply to Jones Beene's message of Fri, 1 Mar 2013 19:27:02 -0800: Hi, [snip] Believe it or not - there is NO model or hypothesis to predict the mass of a proton! Many in fizzix assume there is, but they are wrong. (there are dozens of efforts to do this, as in QCD - but none has gotten much

Re: [Vo]:Russian meteors, correllated? Ans to Ed.

2013-03-01 Thread David L Babcock
Imagine a 1000 ton floating rock, with a one ton boulder orbiting it. Perhaps at 100 miles... What's the orbital speed? I don't have the formula, but I'll guess, oh, 1 ft/s. (1 ft/day? (Remember, if it's more than escape velocity, it's not really in orbit)). Now, set our little system

RE: [Vo]:D or H loading...and other questions..

2013-03-01 Thread DJ Cravens
I am not sure of the cube causing an explosion. I seem to recall it burning a hole through the lab bench and onto the floor. I got to see the floor mark at the ICCF-1 meeting as it was shown to those that got to tour the lab. I remember Andy Riley was alsoin my tour group. There was also

Re: [Vo]:RE: Proton radius in question, after 3 years the textbooks may need to be corrected...

2013-03-01 Thread mixent
In reply to Terry Blanton's message of Fri, 1 Mar 2013 22:30:12 -0500: Hi, [snip] I have a question. Really two. Would it be more likely that a proton could capture a positron than an electron? No, it can't capture a positron at all, because protons and positrons have the same charge, and

RE: [Vo]:D or H loading...and other questions..

2013-03-01 Thread DJ Cravens
It has been several years ... I will need to look up my schematic for exact values. It was basically an LC parallel type tank circuit. It was feed to 10 Mohm (I seem to recall) and voltage read across that. It was in a 3 inch brass cylinder hollowed out for the circuit with a BNC at the top

Re: [Vo]:RE: Proton radius in question, after 3 years the textbooks may need to be corrected...

2013-03-01 Thread Eric Walker
On Fri, Mar 1, 2013 at 7:27 PM, Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote: Quark mass does not have a value which can be agreed on, so how can protons? If I were a betting man, I would bet that the mass of a proton can change, as well as that of a neutron. The reasoning goes like this. An

Re: [Vo]:Responses to four questions from Ron Maimon

2013-03-01 Thread Eric Walker
On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 11:30 AM, mix...@bigpond.com wrote: In a different connection, an important point that he makes concerns the ROI -- he says that a 20 keV deuteron will travel a long distance, perhaps on the order of millimeters, through a metal. Assuming he's right, that's a lot more