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Frank
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April 15th, 2011 at 8:47 PM
Dear Mr. Rossi,
I wonder if you are aware that Professor Peter Hagelstein of MIT remarked today
that he would love the opportunity to test the E-cat. I found his comments in
this article that was posted on April 15th. I thought you might be interested
in this if you were not already aware.
http://www.lifeslittlemysteries.com/newest-cold-fusion-machine-does-impossible-1584/
Best regards,
Frank
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Andrea Rossi
April 15th, 2011 at 9:31 PM
Dear Mr Frank: I receive every day requests from all the world of Universities,
Associations, Laboratories from any Country, of any kind which want to make an
“indipendent” test to offer us the only possible real validation of the
technology. Should I accept, 24 hours per day, 365days per year would not be
enough to be so much validated. I respect all the wannavalidate of the Planet,
but I want to remember that: 1- In October we will start deliver to our
Customers our plants, so that the validation will be made by the Customers:
they will use our plants 24 hours per day, 365 days per year. That is the sole
real validation that counts for us, also because if the plants work, Customers
will pay us, if not, they will not pay us. The plants have to respect precise
guarantees we gave about their efficiency and their safety. We are not
searching any validation. We never did. We just wanted to make a good
product.We have already made our public presentations, no more of them will be
made. With the University of Bologna we will continue the R&D program, but not
to “validate”: the validation must arrive from the market. The aim of the R&D
program with the University of Bologna, financed by us, and therefore made with
our money, is to develope our future, not to “validate”. Not to mention the
fact that the real target of the wannabe validators, in 99 cases out of 100, is
to get information and make industrial espionage, as already occurred to me
with another “validator” with whom we severed any collaboration after getting
evidence of the fact that data obtained from us have been utilized for a
competition. 2- I thank anyway Prof. Peter Hagelstein for his attention. If the
MIT is interested to our product, they can buy a plant, and make all the
validations they want, for themselves, and get from it good heating too, during
the hard Bostonian winters ( I lived there for some year, mamma mia, che
freddo!) Warm regards, A.R.