I have always felt that the internal heater of the old cats was the main one.  
Rossi has always used misdirection and apparently Mary fell for it.

Dave



-----Original Message-----
From: Alan J Fletcher <[email protected]>
To: vortex-l <[email protected]>
Sent: Thu, Nov 10, 2011 1:30 pm
Subject: Re: [Vo]:New diagram of Rossi reactor


At 10:12 AM 11/10/2011, Mary Yugo wrote:
i MY ... you're all over the web !!!
>In the older small (but allegedly powerful) E-cats, the main 
(largest and probably most powerful) heater has always heated the 
cooling water!   This is evident because it's wrapped around the 
*exterior* of the E-cat.
The older "tube" eCats have  always had two heaters ... one "main" 
eater  clamped around the rector bulge, and an "auxiliary" tube 
eater inserted into the inlet tube.
ttp://lenr.qumbu.com/110406-b-Img+2+ECAT_explained.jpg (original on 
yteknik, I think)
>  This never made sense, by the way, unless the objective was to use 
 electricity to heat water and make steam.    In the diagram the 
 heater is shown to be internal.  Rossi has never revealed enough 
 about the larger devices to be sure that the image really shows how 
 the heater is configured.  If the heater is entirely internal to 
 the water circuit, it's a departure from his previous layout.  I 
 see no reason to assume such a departure.

Also, the whole drawing is pretty fanciful because nobody really 
knows what Rossi puts into the E-cats he has shown much less what 
was in the ones that were contained in his "megawatt plant".  If the 
secret is only in the catalyst "sauce", I don't understand why Rossi 
doesn't do a complete disassembly after a test.  What secrets could 
be revealed by seeing some metal powder?   Even if he's concerned 
about that, he could disassemble all the way to the final core and 
stop there.  What's he hiding?
Is it loose powder? Nanotubes? Crystals on a surface?    Lots of 
tuff I wouldn't want to show, so I don't blame him.


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