Russ George of Planktos fame has blogged his ideas about hydrino-based cold
fusion in an entry titled "HYDRINO DARK FUSION ?
<http://atom-ecology.russgeorge.net/2014/07/14/hydrino-fusion/>"

An excerpt:

I chatted with Randy years ago at a physics conference and we exchanged
some ideas on how the hydrino state of deuterium might facilitate a sort of
hydrino moderated dark fusion of two deuteriums, perhaps via something akin
to a screening mechanism and just maybe there-in is a connecting thread
between our work. But how one gets two protons to fuse even in the strange
states characteristic of cold fusion is a stretch for me, that qualify as
dark fusion for sure.

The central question between cold fusion and hydrinos becoming dark matter
is the resulting energy. Hydrino production is an order of magnitude or
more energetic than burning hydrogen while DD fusion yielding 4He, hot or
cold, is about ten million times more energetic that burning hydrogen (or
deuterium). So if one needs a source of energy sufficient to produce a bit
of star-like plasma you need around a million times the number of hydrino
events as DD cold fusion events to do so. At least we are not
astronomically far apart.

I tend to think that the 1 atom of D for every 5000+ atoms of H that are
found in common hydrogen is the real active constituent of “light” hydrogen
NiH fusion or LENR (Low Energy Nuclear Reactions) for those who are afraid
of the ghost of Martin Fleischman or are merely his ‘cold fusion’ usurpers.
It’s easier to imagine hydrinos than proton proton fusion.


On Fri, Sep 19, 2014 at 3:19 PM, <[email protected]> wrote:

> In reply to  James Bowery's message of Fri, 19 Sep 2014 11:27:17 -0500:
> Hi,
> [snip]
> >Since hydrino.org is dead as a discussion group (it just redirects to
> BLP's
> >site) is there a forum where people are still talking about GUToCP etc.?
>
> [email protected]
>
> This is a moderated group, Mills himself follows it and responds to
> questions.
> I would characterize it more as a "fan club".
> I get the impression that if the question is too critical, Mills will just
> refer
> to a section of his book.
>
> Regards,
>
> Robin van Spaandonk
>
> http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/project.html
>
>

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