The Q and A between Krivit and Rossi (on the NET link that Jones refers to 
below) has Rossi giving
many additional tidbits...
 
One is that books by Greiner and Cooks were important to his success...
This is what Rossi has to say about it:
"the more important books (for me, Greiner and Cooks) do not give solutions." 
 
He's referring to theoretical solutions... they were apparently very helpful 
for the experimental
work.

-Mark

  _____  

From: Jones Beene [mailto:jone...@pacbell.net] 
Sent: Wednesday, January 19, 2011 7:40 AM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: [Vo]:Krivit relents



 
<http://blog.newenergytimes.com/2011/01/19/rossi-and-focardi-lenr-device-probably-real-with-credit-t
o-piantelli/>
http://blog.newenergytimes.com/2011/01/19/rossi-and-focardi-lenr-device-probably-real-with-credit-to
-piantelli/

But he is still giving the most credit to Piantelli, when probably that is 
completely wrong, and the
three things which led to this breakthrough were (in order of importance):

1)      The previous Rossi/Leonardo TEG work with nano-nickel

2)      The published work of Randell Mills

3)      The published work of Arata/Zhang, Kitamura, etc

Obviously when you are a smart guy like Rossi, you find an anomaly in one field 
(thermoelectrics)
with the same Raney nickel you had discovered as being so energetic that it 
caused two fires in you
Lab . and then, as any good experimenter will do - you go to the internet to 
look for help or
understanding in unrelated fields, then  2) and 3) above are the most 
authoritative help out there.

Next, you apply what you have learned to a field that became bifurcated in the 
mid 1990s, due to ego
problems, and WOW, suddenly you become the hero of that unrelated field.

IOW - Rossi had his "Goodyear moment" at the expense of all of those in LENR, 
including Piantelli,
who refused to acknowledge the gigantic advance of Mills, who himself was too 
egotistical to want to
believe that he got a major part of CQM wrong - and that in the end the secret 
was nothing more or
less than a subset of the "cold fusion" field that he dreaded so much.

A short and fractured (fractal?) history of LENR  in a brief reappraisal.

Jones

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