By the way, IMHO, no industrial heat boiler is restricted to producing a
constant amount of heat. These units are "heat on demand" systems.

A thermostatically controlled valve controls the flow of steam into the
customer's process.

On Mon, Aug 15, 2016 at 9:28 PM, Jed Rothwell <[email protected]> wrote:

> Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> When steam is required, water is removed from the circuit and sent to the
>> customer, then that condensed water from condensed steam is return to the
>> circuit.
>>
>
> Perhaps you are suggesting that heat not needed is dumped out. The
> imaginary heat rate is 1 MW but some fraction goes to the customer and the
> rest is removed with the invisible fans and non-existent vents?
>
> Anyway, this statement of yours is wrong, according to Rossi himself:
>
> "Rossi's reactor control mechanism must self throttle to reduce heat
> production based on demand."
>
> The reactor itself is never self-throttled. It continues to produce steady
> 1 MW heat even when you turn it off and take it apart.
>
> Hey, that's what the man claims, okay?
>
> - Jed
>
>

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