I cannot say this. I dont even know wether the powder came from the inside or 
outside.
Posiibly it comes from leaked and evaporated water?

Rossi claimed 120° overheated steam @ air pressure. Thats a litle bit strange.
If he used salty water with elevated boiling point, this could explain it.
I dont know, if it is possible to rise the boiling point so much with salts.
With glycol it is possible. 


----- Original Nachricht ----
Von:     Aussie Guy E-Cat <[email protected]>
An:      [email protected]
Datum:   10.11.2011 09:15
Betreff: Re: [Vo]:Inside the inner box

> Ok a good call. No micros inside. When Rossi's tech was getting ready to 
> open the module, he wipes away a lot of white powder that was sitting on 
> top of the top metal plate. Do you think the powder might have been 
> powered Boric Acid placed all around the E-Cat as a neutron shield?
> 
> AG
> 
> 
> On 11/10/2011 6:39 PM, [email protected] wrote:
> > I think its unlikely that semiconductors are inside.
> > At the september demo the temperature was 120° and if 3 cores are in
> opereation I would expect more.
> > A single case of overheating would damage the system and Rossi claims a
> maximum temp of abaout 450°.
> > Also all these gamma and possibly neutron bursts that have been observed
> could degrade the semiconductors.
> >
> >
> > ----- Original Nachricht ----
> > Von:     Aussie Guy E-Cat<[email protected]>
> > An:      [email protected]
> > Datum:   10.11.2011 05:38
> > Betreff: [Vo]:Inside the inner box
> >
> >> I have been thinking about what should be inside the inner box as the
> >> heat transfer from the reactor core to the fluid is no longer done
> >> inside the door knob like reactor.
> >>
> >> Rossi says there are 3 cores inside each module and that is all he says.
> >> I would suggest he may have encased all the cores inside a solid lead
> >> slab like structure with a thermal interface compound applied to the top
> >> and bottom surfaces so as to thermally transfer the heat into the upper
> >> and assumed lower fin assemblies. What we see with the bolts is the
> >> upper surface of the heat exchanger assembly and likely an identical
> >> assembly (why make it different) on the bottom. The lead slab with the
> >> embedded cores is then sandwiched inside and between the heat exchanger
> >> fin assemblies. I also suggest as he said the 1 MW demo was only running
> >> on 1 core per module, he has a was to activate and deactivate the
> >> internal cores as desired. This adds additional weight to my belief that
> >> the "RF Wires" are actually multi core shielded cable or if not he maybe
> >> running a power line comms system that delivers both power and 2 way
> >> data to the 3 cores. Easy to do today, especially if he has a micro
> >> inside to assist the core control and do data logging that can be later
> >> accessed for analysis.
> >>
> >> Having a solid lead slab structure would aid modular maintenance and
> >> module fuel replacement as all the the maintenance guys would need do is
> >> replace the lead slab with the 3 embedded reactor cores, which would
> >> then be returned to Rossi for replacement of the fuel.
> >>
> >>   From the weight of the E-Cat module, there is more inside the boxes
> >> than just 3 door knob reactors, a bit of piping, fins, walls and a few
> >> nuts and bolts.
> >>
> >>
> >
> 
>

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