> Jeff,
>
> thermometer was calibrated and unlike common belief, boiling point was not
> 100 degrees, but 99.7°C ± 0.1.

So then you are relying on Rossi's calibration being accurate to
within +/- .5 C and believing Rossi who  comes across as a fraud
(hiding the evidence down the drain, terrible choice of experiment for
public demonstration, previous legal troubles, money problems etc.)?

It's so easy for Rossi to fake his experiment if you have to rely on +/- .5 C.

I'd rather see Rossi make 50 gallons of hot water so that everyone can
pull out there own uncalibrated thermometer  and measure that the
water went from 15 C to 30 C over a 3 hour period (for example).  A
thermometer that is uncalibrated will usually give the right delta
temperature but not the right absolute temperature.


On Sun, Jun 26, 2011 at 2:50 AM, Jouni Valkonen <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> The fact is that steam must be dry if it's temperature is above 100.1 °C ±
> 0.1 at atmospheric pressure.
>
> —Jouni
>

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