At 02:38 PM 6/13/2008 -0400, you wrote:
Ode Coyote wrote:
The guy splitting water with microwaves didn't reveal how much power
the microwave emitter was pulling.
"Publicity stunt" showing only that
thermal cracking of water sorta works and that a microwave can heat up
water, that hot and that fast if it's big and powerful enough.
..a Dennis
Lee style "gee whizzer" without a mystery unless the obvious is ignored.
No, all that was revealed by the lab that duplicated his results. Don't
remember exactly, but the power wasn't that high, around 500 watts I think.
## And the BTU output was what?
If it was any worse than a 24% loss, it's still a gee whizzer.
You'll be needing a lot more [true] info before even *thinking* about
Scalar energy as a justifiable factor.
Granted, what isn't shown, can't be
true OR un-true...so did that guy lie?
No, he never mentioned "overunity"
How did overunity get into the conversation? It may be, but would really
be irrelevant.
## Popping corn in under 5 seconds with a combined 6-9 watts and scalar
waves would be overunity...more power out than 'people' put in.
6-9 watts over that much area won't do it at all.
BTW The FCC sets the parameters that all cell phones use.
It's highly
unlikely that any are significantly different than any other.
Also, they
don't emit a danged thing while they ring...nothing, until you open up the
circuit by answering.
Actually that is incorrect. The highest power that they transmit is
normally during ringing. There is a lot of hand shaking going on when it
is rigning, and the phone goes to full power at that time to make sure it
all works with no dropouts. Once the connection is made, then the closest
tower and signal loss is identified, the phone switched to the closest
tower, and the power is adjusted downward depending on how far away the
tower is. It is all spelled out in the Q.921 call control protocol.
## OK agreed...mine tells me if theirs is in the service area or not, if
not, it won't connect and it has to find that out somehow.
Never the less the FCC set a max of 3 watts. "full power"
Most cell phones do 2 watts.
4 watts for a cordless phone?
Ode
Marshall
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