Re: [Vo]:Re: Old disposible button lithium batteries spectacularly explodes

2015-11-10 Thread Terry Blanton
On Tue, Nov 10, 2015 at 3:40 AM, jjam...@gmail.com  wrote:
>
> Even there would be a conventional way to explain the explosion, it may be
> worth to check the presence of ionizing particles at this short moment.
> Could be an affordable instrument for that?

Photographic film.  If you can find such.  :-)



Re: [Vo]:Re: Old disposible button lithium batteries spectacularly explodes

2015-11-10 Thread John Berry
Good question.  A cellphone app maybe?

On Tue, Nov 10, 2015 at 9:40 PM, jjam...@gmail.com 
wrote:

>
> Even there would be a conventional way to explain the explosion, it may be
> worth to check the presence of ionizing particles at this short moment.
> Could be an affordable instrument for that?
>
>
> H Ucar
>
>
> -- Original message--
>
> *From: *jjam...@gmail.com
>
> *Date: *Mon, Nov 9, 2015 16:08
>
> *To: *vortex-L@eskimo.com;
>
> *Cc: *
>
> *Subject:*Old disposible button lithium batteries spectacularly explodes
>
>
> I exploded two button batteries by heating through soldering iron.
> Explosion is spectacular, maybe comparable to amno. When exploded the
> content is completely blow out and sticked as fine gray powder to suface of
> safety container. Soldering iron tip is also crooked. I dont the reaction
> that occurs but as the lithium appears prime element in LENR this can be
> focused that way.
>
>
> Why these tiny dead batteries explodes so violently?
>
>
>
> H Ucar
>


[Vo]:Re: Old disposible button lithium batteries spectacularly explodes

2015-11-10 Thread jjam...@gmail.com

Even there would be a conventional way to explain the explosion, it may be 
worth to check the presence of ionizing particles at this short moment. Could 
be an affordable instrument for that?
H Ucar
-- Original message--From: jjamdix@gmail.comDate: Mon, Nov 9, 2015 
16:08To: vortex-L@eskimo.com;Cc: Subject:Old disposible button lithium 
batteries spectacularly explodes
I exploded two button batteries by heating through soldering iron. 
Explosion is spectacular, maybe comparable to amno. When exploded the content 
is completely blow out and sticked as fine gray powder to suface of safety 
container. Soldering iron tip is also crooked. I dont the reaction that occurs 
but as the lithium appears prime element in LENR this can be focused that way.
Why these tiny dead batteries explodes so violently? H Ucar