In the interview recorded in Episode 15 of the Cold Fusion Now! podcast
with Dennis Cravens, he describes at about 1:50 in to after 3:10 how his
reactor produces holes in the surface of his tube and if the rector is run
hard at a high power density, the reactor falls apart. Dennis Cravens also
mentions other developers that see the same volcano like holes in their
reactor structure.

If LENR developers would look closely at the areas in their reactors that
are LENR active, they would see all the signs that point to the cause of
the LENR reaction. These indicators are seen in many LENR reactors.

https://www.coldfusionnow.com/podcast/Ruby-Carat-Dennis-Cravens-Cold-Fusion-Now-015.mp3





On Sat, Jul 13, 2019 at 9:25 PM Jed Rothwell <jedrothw...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Axil Axil <janap...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>> *Furthermore, from studying LENR results over the years, it is becoming
>> increasingly apparent to me that LENR has a major issue to deal with. LENR
>> makes matter and energy disappear. A major problem with LENR reactors is
>> that they fall apart over time. This highly corrosive effect that these
>> reactors suffer is due to this nasty issue of matter and energy
>> degeneration. This degenerative process only gets worse when the power
>> output level of the reactor goes up.*
>>
> Can you point to any experimental papers describing these problems?
>
> I have read and copy edited hundreds of papers on cold fusion. Many of
> them I did not understand well, especially the theory papers. The
> experimental ones I did understand. In the course of reading all this
> stuff, I have not seen an evidence for what you say here. Nothing. Your
> assertions are entirely imaginary as far as I know. So I do not think we
> need to worry about them.
>
> We have enough real problems in this field. We don't need to worry about
> imaginary ones.
>
>

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