On 11-11-03 03:41 PM, Jed Rothwell wrote:
I wrote:

    The colonel and others who know a lot about steam have all said
    that they are certain this was dry steam.


I mean that he said that about Rossi's previous tests. And this one too.

There is no doubt the Oct. 28 test produced only dry steam. You can see the condensate collection bucket right below the pipe, with the tube going to it. If there had been a lot of water coming out with steam, that bucket would have overflowed in no time.

This colonel was confident that of Rossi's previous tests were valid. Ah, but if he is secretly in cahoots with Rossi that's _just_ what he _would_ say, isn't it?

I do not believe in conspiracy theories. This one is expanding beyond all credibility. You have to believe that Rossi has now paid off George Miley and his intrepid grad students as well.

Oh? Did Miley do an independent rep of Rossi? I hadn't heard that. Got a reference? I would love to see the paper.


The colonel and others who know a lot about steam have all said that they are certain this was dry steam. I'm sure they are right and the people here who disagree are wrong. I tend to believe experts who have worked in a field for decades, rather than the peanut gallery.

"Experts" cut no ice with me, I'm afraid, unless they really are experts in the exact subdiscipline in question, which these people may or may not be.

Remember, the scientists at SRI were totally fooled by Uri Geller.

And Steve Jones is a physicist who should really, really understand how things can and can't fall down, yet he thinks the WTC came down via explosives. (A single viewing of the tapes makes that hypothesis seem totally silly, IMHO, but I guess ol' SJ doesn't agree. And he's a lot more of an expert on mechanics than I am, I'm quite sure.)


These tests all employed large reservoirs in the reactors, so the water level might have varied. It must have varied. There is no reason to think the power was stable to within 1%, never mind a fraction of 1%.

If I can find the time I'll try to look back at what we've got on the tests from last spring, and see how long it should have taken for the temp to start shooting up had the power been, say, 2% too high. I suspect it would have happened PDQ, but it'll take a little work (and some guesses about reservoirs) to see if I'm right.



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