RE: [Vo]:the expected LENR Surprise Rossi's long time test over!Re:What on 
earth make Ni-62 a good catalyst?.  It would nice to at least to have a 
suggested catalytic mechanism.

As Jones notes, it is a singularity with the highest binding potential energy 
per nucleon of any nucleons.  That means its stable.  Maybe it was a required 
Ni lattice constituent to avoid damage to the lattice and, hence,  a productive 
home for the Li-7 H reaction.  I would think that would have to be disclosed in 
a real patent and not assumed to be state of art knowledge.  

The Swedish inspection team must have looked at confirming the absence of other 
isotopes in the ash.  Has there been any additional Lugano testing of ash to 
anybody’s knowledge?

Lastly, I find it surprising to expect the purity of Ni-62 found in the Lugano  
ash consistent with the commercial separation schemes that may have been 
available to Rossi.  Does anybody have a spec for the purity of such an 
isotope.  Jones suggested it would be high at $10,000 per gram.  

The production planning advertised by Rossi/Industrial heat would have to take 
Ni-62 expense into account.  There is not evidence that this is a consideration 
to my knowledge.  

Bob Cook

From: Jones Beene 
Sent: Monday, February 22, 2016 8:17 AM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com 
Subject: RE: [Vo]:the expected LENR Surprise Rossi's long time test over!Re:

From: Teslaalset 

Ø      Rossi does not have any obligations to anyone except probably Darden 
because he invested in his technology development. He is an entrepreneur and 
not somebody who is paid by society… Give Rossi a bit more credit on what he 
shares and what he doesn’t share. From his angle it very understandable. 


I agree with your synopsis – as far as it goes. But there is more to the big 
picture of understanding what is going on - behind the scenes. We have 
discussed this before, circa 2013, but never really took the thread about 
Rossi’s real secret (not-so-secret secret) to its logical conclusion.

On the larger stage of commercial reality - Rossi has had no choice but to put 
the identity of the secret sauce on the table (and then try to hide it in 
practice by a string of deceptive disinformation). It has been crystal-clear 
for 3 years that the one and only public detail which is relevant for the 
successful Rossi-effect  reaction, and is protected by Patent - is the use of 
nickel-62 as the active isotope. Everything else is smoke and mirrors.


62Ni is the only major detail which is protected in Rossi’s granted Italian 
patent, according to experts, and also it is in the pending EPO application 
(EP2259998). Rossi’s wife is a top Italian Lawyer, so it can be assumed that 
she knew the importance of disclosing (and then trying to cover-up) the one 
critical detail – the active ingredient. Yet, the requirement for the rare 
isotope could now be the thorn in Rossi’s heel, since it is expensive and 
renders the entire device commercially non-competitive, if no substitute is 
found. 


Rossi has tried to gloss-over this fact in the past - by claiming that he could 
enrich bulk nickel in this isotope cheaply. Can he? It is clear from the Lugano 
report that he ran the test with a reactor (one of 3 which he brought) which 
contained pure isotope at the start, in the hope of throwing competitors 
off-guard by claiming that the reaction produced it in pure form - as ash! 

Wow – what a brilliant deception. Hats off to AR. Most surprising is that many 
observers, including Levi and his crew, actually bought into this ridiculous 
falsehood. The Lugano reactor did not produce nickel-62 as ash, which is what 
AR wants the world to believe. The nearly pure isotope was there from the 
start. 

One of the remaining reactors which Rossi brought to Lugano (of 3) was indeed 
opened to show the “starting fuel” content - but of course, this one had no 
isotopic enrichment. That is the crux of the deception which has lingered on 
for years. Brilliant.


The reliance on a rare and expensive isotope is why Craven’s started the thread 
below some time ago – trying to find a logical substitute based on the physical 
parameter of 62Ni which makes it unique (ironically: it is high nuclear binding 
energy). In fact 62Ni is a singularity in the periodic table, but its 
characteristics are almost the same as an iron isotope. 


https://www.mail-archive.com/vortex-l%40eskimo.com/msg80458.html

So – in conclusion – the LENR “surprise” in the upcoming report is very likely 
to be partially hidden away, once again. Since the year-long report will be 
positive in terms of gain – that will divert attention from the big problem. 
The report will probably not show that the secret sauce – the one which allowed 
it all to happen, is a rare isotope which costs around $10,000 per gram, unless 
you make it yourself. But the accolades and “told-you-so” boasts from the Rossi 
fan-boys could regrettably cover up the hidden reality… that the emperor has no 
(commercial) clothes.


If there is happy note which can arise from the year-long test, it will be that 
Rossi finally discloses the resolution to the problem: which is that he has 
indeed found an inexpensive way to enrich the nickel fuel cheaply in the active 
isotope.

Chances of that happening are slim.


Jones

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