I wrote:

You can see that the power levels are really not that varied, and there is practically no real-time correlation to the helium.

Also bear in mind those are instantaneous power levels, and there is no telling what it was doing in the instant before they were taken. For example, data point #2, 11-29-93 is 35 mW. It might have been 50 mW sometime earlier, which would explain why there is more helium in the cell than there was with data point #1 even though the power level is the same. Cold fusion power does not fluctuate wildly, but it does fluctuate. Also, as I said, the helium you measure at any given moment might have been generated hours or days before, and it is just escaping now through a newly opened crack.

You need much higher, more steady power to establish the ratio of helium to heat more accurately.

- Jed

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