At 01:14 pm 05-05-05 -0500, you wrote:
>
>
>"One of the most important achievements of the 19th century physics was the
>discovery that a well defined emount of mechanical work is needed to
>generate one unit of heat -- not less and not more. Joule demonstrated this
>in a well known paddle wheel experiment. Water was forced to flow through
>small holes in the paddles of a rotating wheel and the amount of heat was
>measured calorimetrically. But, at a recent conference, a Russian scientist,
>A.I. Koldomasov (1), described an exception from this rule. He claims to
>have a device in which the heat to work ratio is twenty times larger than
>what would be allowed according to Joule�s equivalence rule...
>
>more here
>
>http://blake.montclair.edu/~kowalskil/cf/216koldomasov.html
>From my perspective, the interesting bit of the above web
page is the following.
=================================================
By changing the electric motor rotation rate,
we change the frequency of flow pulsation's
and reach the resonance frequency of the orifice,
which causes intensive cavitation.
================================================
More specifically the "intensive cavitation" bit.
Intensive cavitation implies high pF. Unfortunately
it seems very difficult to get people used to the
idea that there can be such a thing as a Beta-aether
vacuum - let alone a Beta aether which exerts the
tremendous stresses responsible for holding engineering
scale materials as steel and concrete together.
Blast that fellow Newton - and his action at a distance. ;-)
Frank Grimer