*A cold fusion kit would be the best thing that could be done to popularize cold fusion. The acceptance of cold fusion by government and their agencies (the patent office) is an important political exercise.*
*Having wide spread cold fusion experiments done in condensed matter courses throughout the nations universities would be a good start in gaining public acceptance directed toward turning the political tide.* *If the green movement would embrace cold fusion as a better alternative to solar panels and wind mills and a potent creator of jobs, the political tide would be unstoppable.* *However, the kits would need to be relatively safe with little risk of student injury from high pressure hydrogen or toxic nanopowder.* On Fri, Jun 10, 2011 at 1:54 PM, Abd ul-Rahman Lomax <[email protected]>wrote: > At 10:34 PM 6/9/2011, Jones Beene wrote: > > Any high school student should be able to perform a version for less than >> the cost of an X-Box- since it is an UNPOWERED experiment, without >> deuterium >> or platinum. The reaction gives excess heat simply from the nanopowder >> contact with hydrogen at ambient (like Arata, but better). It is a surface >> effect and there is no significant absorption and zero radioactivity. The >> delta-T is low but the heat is apparently continuous and anomalous. >> > > Brian talked about work in this area last year, as I recall. If this is > really simple to do, I'm interested in making kits available, so I expect > I'll talk with Brian about that. As I recall, the material Brian showed us > last year was really, really expensive.... > > Did you mean "palladium" instead of "platinum"? That could be really good > news.... > >

