2011/6/25 Joshua Cude <[email protected]>: > Well it might be if the reactor were at the bottom of a tea pot, and the > output at the top of the pot. But the input and output to the reactor are > both horizontal at the same level.
here was your misunderstanding. This is not true, because water input is at the same level as reactor core, but water output or boiling surface is above the reactor core somewhere in the chimney. You forgot that the chimney makes it tea pot like and essentially vertical in structure. And the more powerful is the reactor, the taller and wider the chimney must be, so that it can contain several liters of water. That reactor type what was used in most recent demonstrations used shorter chimneys, but also the input output power ratio was much smaller and more predictable, so that it can be controlled by adjusting input water flow on proper level, although short chimney's ability to buffer water level is drastically limited. So next time you boil water for tea in the kettle, please measure the dryness of the steam! E-Cat produces _exactly_ as dry steam as your tea pot! –Jouni

