The paper by Luca Gamberale of Defkalion Europe (DE) described the problems
in detail. It is pretty damning:

http://animpossibleinvention.files.wordpress.com/2014/05/dgt-faulty-demo-140502-english.pdf

QUOTES:

Abstract
I show that the experimental protocol used by Defkalion Green Technologies
(DGT) is not reliable to demonstrate the production of large amounts of
energy with the use of the reactor R5. Experimental tests carried out using
the same measurement system used by DGT in public demonstrations show that
the measurement of excess of thermal energy carried out following the
experimental protocol of DGT is obtainable regardless of the use of H2 and
of the high voltage excitation.


. . . I list below some anomalies related to the relationship between DGT
and Mose :

- During the setup of the laboratory in Milan various improvements were
introduced by the DE technicians and scientists concerning the calorimetry
measurement. In particular a method independent of the flow rate
measurement has been developed based on the heating of a large amount of
water contained in a large tank and circulated through a pump in a closed
circuit. This measure is independent of the measurement of the flow through
the coil and it would remove any doubt about the heat measurement. DGT has
not allowed DE to use such measurement in none of the tests of their
technology. As a further improvement we added a second flowmeter upstream
of the water system in order to verify the behavior of the main flowmeter
during the measurement of the excess power but also in this case the added
flowmeter was readily removed by the DGT technicians forbidding us to make
any verification.

- In no case DGT has enabled DE engineers to attend the assembly phase of
the active components in the reaction chamber of the reactor R5 (built by
us according to the DGT diagrams) nor has left the reactor R5 complete with
all the necessary elements for running the experiment in the DE
laboratories without their physical presence.


Discussion
After several tests performed by DE to validate the DGT calorimetry we must
conclude that in the most benevolent case we are faced with a gross
measurement error that has lasted nearly two years and has misled esteemed
researchers who have personally witnessed demos of the DGT technology in
Greece, in Canada and more recently in Italy. . . .

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