Rossi has said the 1st customer does US military research, their 1 MW
E-Cat is installed in the US and they have ordered 13 more. Who they are
working for is anybodies guess. To me it seems clear they were hired to
test the E-Cat at a place away from Rossi (who did the install, is doing
the maintenance and has virtually unlimited access to the plant) and
write a detailed report for their client.
AG
On 11/26/2011 2:35 AM, Charles Hope wrote:
That's enough with the personal attacks.
So the client is the American military, who has hired Fioravanti to
take possession of their goods, and though the branch wants to keep
their identity secret, it nevertheless insisted on the publicity of
the October 28th test?
Am I clear?
On Nov 25, 2011, at 2:49, Marcello Vitale <mvit...@ucsbalum.net
<mailto:mvit...@ucsbalum.net>> wrote:
MY says there is no client. Let me explore the logical consequences
of this revelation. Because it's a fact. MY said it, and it fits
Occam's razor, which says (I am sure I don't need to remind you) that
"whatever MY points to as the simplest theory, is indeed true".
Therefore, October 28 was all a big show, with actors and dancers.
Yet, Rossi is not turning around and selling retail, or selling
stocks. Not making money in any way. Not using the advertisement he
paid for, if you will. It's as if a company would launch a huge ad
campaign, but not put the advertised product in stores. "Buy my ecat!
Available 2013! Please, don't send money now!"
Ah, sure, except he is already making money: from those "secret
investors bound to strict secrecy agreements" who paid him in secret
money drawn in a secret currency nobody else knows about, which of
course would at least explain the financial crisis. Then, why did
Rossi have to make that show, anyway? Show the investors he is
selling? Then they would start asking for a return on the investment.
No, no, the R&D money leeches are always just a few weeks away from a
salable product. It doesn't compute.
Maybe he just wanted to laugh at us? Or maybe he wanted to make sure
MY, certainly his most feared competitor, was kept busy writing about
it and not do any work? But if Rossi is a scammer, the competitor of
a scammer is another scammer. OK, I guess I'm onto something, I think
all the passages in the logical chain do make sense, if one starts
from the assumption that Rossi is a scammer, arriving to the
conclusion that MY is also a scammer seems almost unavoidable.
Which water car are you selling, MY?
MY theory is the simplest!
:-)))) :-))))) :-)))))
On Fri, Nov 25, 2011 at 3:29 AM, Mary Yugo <maryyu...@gmail.com
<mailto:maryyu...@gmail.com>> wrote:
On Thu, Nov 24, 2011 at 6:18 PM, Charles Hope
<lookslikeiwasri...@gmail.com
<mailto:lookslikeiwasri...@gmail.com>> wrote:
On Nov 24, 2011, at 19:49, Jed Rothwell
<jedrothw...@gmail.com <mailto:jedrothw...@gmail.com>> wrote:
He claims to have a self-destruct mechanism built in.
OK. So you hire some munitions experts who defuse such things
for a living. If you buy a megawatt plant, you get 100 tries to
disarm the mechanism. You can try freezing it ... in liquid
nitrogen if necessary. You can examine it first
non-destructively any way you want including the examination
Rossi forbade Celani to do during a demo. I can't believe for
enough money you couldn't break anything Rossi could put in. And
remember, Rossi is limited by safety issues.
Why did he promise to never sell to the military, then turn
around to sell to them as his flagship client?
My theory is the simplest: that there is no client.