>From Jed:

...

> Rossi said that removing the AC heat completely is dangerous. That give me
> the willies. If the external electricity cuts off, will the machine
> overheat? Or if it is built in a self sustaining device and the generator
> fails, will it overheat or go out of control? It would be nice if the heat
> triggered the reaction, and removing the heat simply quenched it, but based
> on Rossi's comment that is is "dangerous" to run without the auxiliary heat,
> that is not the case.
>
> Who knows what to make of it! Rossi is hiding many details.

Granted, the most knowledgeable individuals within the Vort collective
are shooting in the dark with their best educated guesses.
Nevertheless, the gist of what seems to be forming in my mind is the
fact that the "Rossi Effect", if verified, implies that whatever might
be initially built (presumably for the benefit of you and I) is not
likely be translated into consumer products destined for the shelves
WallMart and Home Depot anytime soon.

Based on what I've read so far, I know I'd prefer the full protection
and experience of a major utility company managing the "reactor" -
certainly initially. Hopefully, enuf of them will step up to the
plate. I would assume retrofitting the boilers of a utility would be
economically feasible in many cases

I would think that only after a considerable amount of experience
combined with a good track record has been built up, plus a theory
that everyone can agree on, would consumer products even be
considered.

As Dirty Harry once said: "A man's gotta know his limitations."

Regards
Steven Vincent Johnson
www.OrionWorks.com
www.zazzle.com/orionworks

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