On 04/01/2011 01:22 PM, Dennis wrote:
> remember today's date

Thank you, Dennis....  :-[


>  
> Dennis Cravens
>  
>
> *From:* Stephen A. Lawrence <mailto:[email protected]>
> *Sent:* Friday, April 01, 2011 11:16 AM
> *To:* [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
> *Subject:* Re: [Vo]:Rather amazing LENR site (in French)
>
>
>
> On 04/01/2011 12:52 PM, francis wrote:
>>
>> Here is the pdf in English
>>
>> http://omael.com/!_HydroPlasmol_Telechargements/Resume/Projet_Hydro-Plasmol_Anglais.PDF
>> <http://omael.com/%21_HydroPlasmol_Telechargements/Resume/Projet_Hydro-Plasmol_Anglais.PDF>
>>
>>
>>  
>>
>> They seem to embrace nuclear fusion, proton capture and splitting of
>> molecular bonds by ZPE in their pulsed /HV electrolysis plasma but once
>>
>> again are putting engineering in front of theory as seems the only
>> choice in this field. I often wondered about possible over unity when
>> viewing the old star in a jar you tube videos but it looks like this
>> group took the concept and ran with it! Another contender?
>>
>
> Uh ... contender for what, exactly?
>
> I see in the English version they've switched to using baking soda
> rather than fireplace ashes for the electrolyte, but the iron
> cathode's still there.   It was a couple of old bolts taped together
> in the first photos; in the English PDF they seem to have upgraded to
> using a spring.
>
> And there's no calorimetry mentioned anywhere -- no measurements of
> any sort, in fact.  No evidence whatsoever that the thing does
> anything except use electricity to heat water.
>
> If there's a "Neodyme Foundation" involved in manufacturing anything
> at all (except maybe greeting cards), Google doesn't seem to know
> about it.
>
>
> This website appears to be some sort of strange joke.
>
>

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