Sorry to keep beating a dead horse here, but I did not make this clear. I
wrote:


> You should. It is physically impossible to measure what [Levi] did if it
> was caused by a chemical reaction, and there are no hidden wires or pipes
> big enough to account for it. See Alan Fletcher's analysis:
>

Fletcher's conclusion, which I agree with, is that the only way the second
test could be fake would be if Levi himself is part of the conspiracy. He
has to be lying too. (He would have to be "in cahoots" as we say in the
U.S.) If you assume his measurements of flow and temperature are right then
fraud is physically impossible.

The point is, that would be true whether the experiment is done in a
building at the university, or off campus. If Levi is lying, he can lie as
easily at the university as anywhere else. And if he is telling the truth,
that settles it. No physical arrangements of equipment can be made in a
building off campus that would allow Rossi to fool someone. The device is
too small. It is too easy to look inside it, and all around it to confirm
there are no wires or pipes.

As I pointed out previously, with a much larger machine installed in a
building off campus, there are a few methods that hypothetically could be
used to make a fake demonstration, such as running pipes up the legs of the
machine. These tricks would cost a lot of money, and the tests to be
performed at Defkalion would surely discover them. But they are
hypothetically possible, whereas with the smaller machine they are ruled
out.

- Jed

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