Thank you MC

-----Original Message-----
From: Mike Carrell [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: 25 October 2008 22:49
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Banking on BLP?


----- Original Message ----- 
From: Remi Cornwall
To: [email protected]
Sent: Saturday, October 25, 2008 11:13 AM
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Banking on BLP?


OK, you caught me lurking.

I am fascinated by this BLP stuff but haven't been following it in detail 
over the years.

MC: You have a lot of cathing up to do. Go to www.blacklghtopower.com and 
soak up the tutorial material available; it is quite condensed. The paper I 
cited will be rough going.

Ron Wormus gave this: 
http://www.blacklightpower.com/Documentary%20Video/blacklight_experiment_vid
eo_v2.wmv 
The videos are not very instructive. there are a lot of animations worthy of

study.

These guys seem competent, respected and well kitted out in their lab. Where

is a video or write up for the more technical crowd?

MC: Mills magnum opus, all 1000+ pages, can be downloaded from the website, 
along with selected papers. A list of over 70 journal papers is given, 
available for a fee from the respctive journals. There is an extensive Power

Point briefing, but no narration. The best book I know of about Mills is 
"America's Newton" by Tom Stolper, available as a print-on-demand book from 
Amazon.

'Heat spike': relative magnitudes MC: 50 kW reported, megajoule total heat.
'Small amount of hydrogen': How much? MC: About 5 mg NaOH charge.
Nickel: How much? about 1 kg Raynal-Ni, a commercial catalyst
Electrical input: etc Energy input for heater1396 kJ, output 2194 kJ, excess

753 kJ [vaporize 8 oz water]
Temperature of reaction vessel? Peaked at 600 C
Did Ni undergo phase change? Not stated. All reactants resused except added 
H.

Big questions:
1) More power is generated than is needed to split water from hydrogen. What

about that needed to regenerate the Ni or is it a consumable? MC: Ni is not 
a comsumeable. Power needed to operate the recycling process not known, 
pending engineering studies. The final energy yield is so high that there is

reasonable belief that a closed cycle system can be built. Doing such is 
BLP's current target.

2) Is the Ni H complex somehow more inert at the end of the process? MC: I 
don't know. Mills states that it is only necessary to add H in the 
regeneration steps, and that such has been deomostrated by bench chemistry. 
Whether this holds true in a large scale operating reaction remains to be 
seen. Surprises can be expected.

I can't vouch anything for Mills' GUTs because I haven't been exposed to 
them. It is understood that Chemistry is the physics of the outer electron 
shell. Processes are expected to be only a few eV. MC: The shell shrinks 
during the catalysis process, releasing a large burst of energy. Multiple 
stages of shrinkage have been observed.

A Chemistry of inner electron shells would be radical and he would be a 
visionary in the league of a Linus Pauling when he used QM to describe the 
chemical bond. MC: True, and Mills is only dealing with hydrogen [or 
deuterium]. Mills has developed software for molecular modeling by a 
subisidary Millsian, Inc.

On this point would the activation energies of these reactions be 
prohibitively large or slow to start but then rapidly feeding back? Can they

do chemical kinetic type experiments to postulate reaction intermediates, 
you know, what data? Mechanisms. MC: The activation enegies are a small 
fraction of the yield. Once hydrinos are created, they can interact in 
complex ways.

On a simple hydrogen model, the energy levels are proportional to the mass 
of the electron. To drop below would require the mass of the electron to 
change. I can't imagine (yet) what the effect of a change in the effective 
mass would have in a lattice. I guess it wouldn't. I don't know how easy it 
is to transmute electrons into muons. MC: The mass of the electron does not 
change; its orbit is closer to the proton.

Any suggestions and write ups?

MC: See above. Good Hunting.
Mike Carrell


Remi.




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