Mitchell Swartz wrote:
Also, corroborating this, we have made electricity for years using cold fusion systems [since before our first report in Fusion Facts (Hal Fox, editor) a decade ago when a small light bulb first turned on by CF,
Are you claiming that ten years ago you were able to light a lightbulb using energy generated by cold fusion?
That's sure what it sounds like. But if that's true, then ten years ago you were way, way ahead of everyone else in the feld, and you were already ahead of where everyone else in the field is today, as well.
I've been following this online off and on for some years, and five years ago, you never seemed to have an answer to the jab, "Where's the water heater?" on sci.physics.fusion. If you could power a lightbulb with CF ten years back then surely you can make a water heater, too, even if it's only a small one. Certainly, with energy to drive a lightbulb you could heat enough water to make a cup of tea, and counter another of the standard jabs directed at CF in the news groups. Why did you never say so?
If that's not what you meant, then just what did you mean?

