See for the analysis

https://www.facebook.com/MartinFleischmannMemorialProject

On Tue, Jan 6, 2015 at 9:04 PM, Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote:

> From the analysis of the DB2Day Autopsy, loading hydrogen into the Dog
> Bone is a complicated an involved process. It seems to me, if too much heat
> is applied at initial start up, hydrogen pressure may clime too high too
> fast when enough Lithium aluminum hydride is provided to ensure that when
> after all the preheating is done, enough hydrogen remains free from the
> absorption by the  reactor structure to optimize the LENR reaction in
> steady state operation.
>
> When the Dog Bone is subsequently restarted, the hydrogen loading profile
> will most probably be changed since some hydrogen will have been retained
> in the nickel powder and the structural material be it either stainless
> steel or alumina.
>
> I can see why Rossi needs to be on site and actively managing the heat up
> of the Dog Bone. The Dog Bone is not something that one can initally
> startup or turn off and on easily or automatically. This is BAD.
>

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