John Salinger 
September 21st, 2011 at 2:37 AM
Dear Mr. Rossi,
1. You claim to have successfully measured the delta T of entering and exiting 
water of a secondary circuit on the 1 MW plant already, producing results in 
line with what has been observed earlier. Is this also the manner in which the 
test for the October demonstration will be conducted?
2. If not, are you however planning for an “idiot-proof” system that leaves no 
room for speculation as to the reliability of the method for calculating the 
overall energy, i.e., something other than calorimetry with steam?
3. Considering that the apparatus is now larger than before, how long does the 
test have to be run to exclude any chemical reaction?
Best Regards,
~John
 
  
Andrea Rossi 
September 21st, 2011 at 8:35 AM 
Dear John Salinger:
1- Yes for the modules, impossible for the 1 MW
2- Yes, recovering the liquid water at the output and subtracting it from the 
amount of treated water, which gives us a penalty, because the liquid water is 
also made by condensed water after the vaporization, but we can accept this 
conservative issue
3- the apparatus is smaller than before: the volume is occupied from the heat 
exchanger. We will allow the Scientists to open the envelope which contains the 
heat exchangers to see that the reactors are very small. The volume of the 
reactors is about 30 centiliters/kW.
After 1 hour any possibility of elevtrochemical energy source is over, no 
batteries exist anywhere able to produce 1 kWh of energy in 1 hour in a volume 
of 30 cl (centiliters).
Warm Regards,
A.R.

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