They say that there is nothing new under the sun. This applies to wet LENR. Back in the 1960’s Joe Papp used the wet LENR formula to blast a crater into the hardpan desert floor of the California desert.
Engineering is the art of turning disadvantage tp your fullest advantage. Joe Papp did this by amplifying the explosive nature of the wet LENR process to drive a piston. Joe was after explosive pressure increase and not heat production and wet LENR reaction gave him that explosiveness in abundance. When dielectric gases like oxygen and chlorine and some other noble gases are added to hydrogen, you get an unstable, hard to control and explosive mix which is great for a pressure based internal explosion discharge engine. Those who want to use water in their LENR mix should look to other engineering solutions other than the electrolytic cell. On Thu, Dec 12, 2013 at 12:35 AM, Eric Walker <[email protected]> wrote: > On Tue, Dec 10, 2013 at 8:56 PM, Foks0904 . <[email protected]> wrote: > > Unfortunately there remains very little evidence that hints at a >> correlation between transmutations and excess heat. The Miley work has not >> been replicated and remains ambiguous, albeit interesting. Results cited by >> Krivit in Naturwissenschaften do not reveal anything convincing. Nowhere in >> their ICCF 17 or 18 papers do DGT claim transmutations as the prime >> mover for excess heat; at best they insinuate it may be a contributor. ... >> > > Thank you for the good summary. Basically, at the end of 2013, here's > what we know for sure about NiH: > > - We think there might be something going on, but aren't sure. > - Some people doing experiments have said some things. > - Any excess heat might or might not have something to do with > transmutations. > > I'm hoping the rate at which we acquire knowledge on this topic will speed > up a little in 2014. > > Eric > >

