Jouni Valkonen <jounivalko...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Jed, I meant with calibration, that there was not measured the amount of
> steam. Amount of steam correlates with temperature, but this correlation was
> not established. Therefore we do not have any means to know, how much steam
> is 104.5°C. However I take back that I took back my words.
>
> I was considered that because we have very high velocity steam, liquid
> water may not enter to the water trap. . . .


I see what you mean. However, even if there were only hot pressurized water
at 104.5°C, input energy was only 66 kWh so there must have been massive
anomalous heat.

I wish we had much more technical information, and I wish we had proof this
was steam and not steam and hot water, but honestly, these issues are not
important. The only thing we must establish to be sure this is real are bona
fides of Ing. Fioravanti. As long as he is not some friend of Rossi's
pretending to be an engineer, then I am sure the test was legitimate. I
doubt that he is.

Michele Comitini pointed out that Fioravanti does not have to be registered:

"Also if the customer does not need a certification of the plant with legal
value, for instance because Fioravanti works for the customer, there is no
need for him to be on the register to do an internal report."

I am not sure what you mean. Perhaps you mean that Fioravanti would not need
a license as long as he is not working to install or certify a boiler for a
customer. I assume he is licensed because he is referred to in the document
as "Engineer" and "Ing." I assume that is similar to the English "P.E."
(professional engineer) which people append to the name. That means you have
a license. It is like "MD" (medical doctor). You would get into legal
trouble if you say you are "PE" or "MD" but you are not.

Assuming he is a PE then he would get into trouble for signing a fraudulent
report under any circumstances, for any purpose, whether it is internal for
his own company or for a customer. In the U.S. he would get in trouble.

Just because you are a PE, I do not know if that means you are registered
anywhere, in Italy. I do not know how that works. I believe all U.S. PE and
MDs are registered, and probably they are all on line these days. Retired
MDs are not. Their license to practice is lapsed.

- Jed

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