Robin van Spaandonk wrote:

However, Graneau et al. have shown that lowly water, at lest some types of H2O, *does* have an unexplained energy component which can be released. One of their papers also appears in "Infinite Energy".

Since they use high voltage electrical discharges to accomplish this (AFAIK), it
seems to me that their results can adequately be explained by Hydrinos,

I was not trying to explain Graneau's findings, so much as to suggest that they have produced repeatable, believable results which are unexplained, and greatly in need of more R&D. They think that the excess energy in water is derived from solar - and that seems likely.

Instead of supporting this work, in our beloved USA -- it is deemed wiser to grant big oil, like Exxon, massive tax-breaks to go along with their obscene profits, and to support dead-end wasteful spending on hot fusion instead. Go figure.

And any rate, if hydrinos are involved in the Graneau results, which is also the most likely explantion IMHO based on what we know - then there is no great conflict with your view, except that they are natural, solar-derived, and brought in with the solar wind - which is why they turn up in rain water, which gives the best results in that experiment.

We may never know the answer, if big-oil has its way and can keep putting its minions in high office.

Jones

BTW Exxon has been posting the highest quarterly profits in history - why do they need tax breaks ? How long before they too can move corporate offices to Dubai to escape congressional scrutiny?

$10.71 billion for the fourth quarter of 2005 and $36.13 billion for the full year. If they had been forced to pay half of that for alternative R&D ... Oh never mind. It is too painful too imagine the extent of our lost opportunities recently - to change the world for the better.

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