Adrian,

It is entirely possible that IH hired the expert after the test started.
Or maybe they hired him before the test started.  Perhaps all seemed well
to us between IH and Rossi.  Some who have access to additional information
were aware of difficulties early on.  It is hard to say from the cheap
seats what Leonardo and IH were saying to one another, and what they were
saying among themselves.

Eric


On Sun, Jun 5, 2016 at 4:01 PM, a.ashfield <[email protected]> wrote:

Eric,
> I don't think IH hired the expert until after the test started.  All
> seemed well between IH and Rossi when the test started.
>
> On 6/5/2016 3:22 PM, Eric Walker wrote:
>
> On Sun, Jun 5, 2016 at 2:16 PM, a.ashfield <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> My new hypothesis is that the expert that IH brought in (having little
>> expertise themselves) was from academia and was a believer in Clarke's
>> Law.   As he couldn't disprove the ERV he was desperately looking around
>> for some way to do that.  Hence his insistence on visiting the customer's
>> facility.
>>
>
> The problem precedes this suggestion.  The expert would have been
> incompetent not to insist on seeing the customer's area.
>
> Eric
>
>
>

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