David Roberson <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> I reluctantly have to agree with you.  I would love to have that run as a
> reference, but just the taking apart of the unit to reinstall a new wire,
> or any changes whatsoever mess up the calibration.
>

This happens to some extent with most calorimeters. Ed and others have told
me that when you take the lid off a Seebeck calorimeter, and then you put
it back and bolt it down, the calibration constant comes
out measurably different.

If the excess heat is so small it might be brought into question because of
effects like this, it is too small to believe.

I have enormous respect for Ed, and McKubre, Miles, Fleischmann and others
who have mastered calorimetry to such an extent they can detect these
microscopic changes. I understand why they want extreme accuracy and
precision. At the same time, I feel that if you cannot even detect the heat
without that precision, I cannot trust it. High precision should be used to
explore robust heat when it appears -- if it appears. It should not be used
to confirm heat at the extreme low limits of detection.

- Jed

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