Hey, speaking of dirty water, there was a really worthwhile observation on that thread:

"Could be anything. Rust, dirt, bacteria. If Rossi wouldn't just let it circulate with a mild 20 kW heating once per circle, *it'd all clog up in whatever part is supposed to turn that filth into steam.*"

!!! Yow !!!

You can't have dirty water running into a boiler, day in, day out, and dry steam coming out the other end -- it's just not gonna work for more than a very short period before the boiler clogs!

And more important, how could the dirt /circulate?/ It wouldn't make it past the boil/vaporize/recondense stage. You've got /distilled water/ coming in from the condenser, so each pass through the device starts with squeaky clean water, so /how could it get dirtier over time?/ The water going round and round, getting redistilled over and over, should be pure enough to drink!

Yet the photos seem to show just that -- crud built up in the system. Therefore, /the water was not being boiled off -- it was traversing the loop as liquid/.

As if we needed more proof -- but the brown water seems pretty iron-clad, even if there were no other evidence that the system didn't work.


On 09/02/2016 11:56 PM, Eric Walker wrote:
On Fri, Sep 2, 2016 at 11:21 AM, Stephen A. Lawrence <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    And .... obvious point ... if the water in the reservoir was
    seriously dirty, as you mentioned in an earlier note, then it
    wasn't pure water, which in turn implies it very probably had a
    higher boiling point than pure water.


See the images in this post on LENR Forum:

https://www.lenr-forum.com/forum/index.php/Thread/3645-Analyzing-E-Cat-Plant-Pump-Photos-Indicate-COP-1-Engineer48/?postID=33411#post33411

The images show what appears to be clear plastic tubing leading from the individual pumps. The fluid going through most of the tubing is dark brown, but the longer tubes running behind the first ones show a lighter color.

Eric


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