Jones Beene wrote:
Brian Ahern will be presenting a chance discovery - which could lead to mass
replication, even at MIT this time if they do not balk at the simplicity :-)

Well said!


As many of you know, Brian has had ongoing success with energetic
nano-materials in an attempt to discover what could be active in the Rossi
E-Cat. For those experiments he uses resistance heating to 500+C. He also
uses a complicated spin-melting process to get the alloys ... but .... what
I am expecting is that when the word of this gets disseminated - then a
number of simpler processes (electroplating is an obvious one) . . .

Brian told me about the spin-melting process but I do not understand the details. If you do understand them, please outline them here.

I think it is similar to what Yamaura et al. did in their 2002 paper.

If spin-melting works, why do you need a simpler process? Who cares how complicated it is, as long as it works. You don't need much catalyst per watt of capacity.

Brian told me that the particles were too large in a recent experiment, so he put the powder back in the grinder for a few days. I gather that is something like a spinning cylinder, similar to what you use to polish stones with pumice.

- Jed

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