Am 16.09.2011 21:26, schrieb Alan J Fletcher:
At 11:57 AM 9/16/2011, Peter Heckert wrote:
The important information is: There is no superheated steam because inside the ecat is everything almost at boiling temperature. For superheated steam you need an extra heater that heats the steam and there is none. Because the temperature inside the e-cat is above 100 degrees the boiling temperature inside must be above 100 degrees and therefore the pressure inside the ecat must be above 1 bar.

I still think that the 2-chamber design explains more than the 1-chamber 3-bar design. The core could easily be engineered with a water-efficient heat exchanger in one chamber, and a steam-efficient heat exchanger in the other.
Someone had the idea Rossi might have multiple small e-cats in this big box.
Possibly he uses one for superheating and possibly this did not work as intended. This would explain his claims "superheated steam, water comes from condensation". He told us what he believed, but he was in error he didnt understand what was going on. Apparently he doesnt know that the purpose of superheated steam is to avoid condensation. If there is superheated steam and the hose is isolated then it is always hotter than 100 centigrade inside and there is no condensation and no water erosion. This is the reason why they superheat steam in industrial machines.

Best,
Peter

Reply via email to