Pour some boiling water into a thermos. For how long does the water
continue to boil?
Harry

On Tue, Oct 11, 2011 at 10:57 AM, Robert Leguillon
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Jed,
> Don't miss the fundamental argument of heat storage.
> Great care was taken to insulate the E-Cat, and keep heat from escaping.  If
> you think that this is impossible, I have an experiment for you.  Make a
> scalding hot 1/2 cup of coffee.  Put it into a Thermos. See how long it
> takes to cool.
> Repeat the experiment with a larger volume of coffee.
> People are saying that 20 liters of boiling water in a container
> specifically designed to hold heat, surrounding large hunks of metal
> exceeding 124C (after all, they must be hotter than the water to heat it)
> has stored energy.
> Rossi, in one of the videos or his blog (can't remember) said there was
> about 20 liters of water.  At .91 s/g flow rate, it would take more than 6
> hours to replace the water in the E-Cat.
> Think eye-dropper of cold water into a scalding hot pot.
> You come across as demeaning when you dismiss these arguments for "violating
> the laws of physics."
> The only temperature increases that you are seeing are on the secondary,
> which necessarily must be incorrect. More than likely, HH is right, and the
> changes seen are the results of slugs of hot water overflowing the E-Cat.
> The measurements at the secondary MUST BE incorrect.  If the measurements
> are correct, the E-Cat would run dry and the temperature would have to rise.
>

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