Talking about money, didn't Rossi say that a big chunk of the money he is
going to make will go to children with cancer?
What happened to that?
G

On Tue, Nov 29, 2011 at 9:56 PM, Aussie Guy E-Cat
<[email protected]>wrote:

> I'm working from currently published figures. $2 million for a 1 MW
> thermal plant and $500 k for the hot fluid to steam generator to steam
> turbine to Ac generator plus control systems, valves, pumps, waste heat
> radiators, etc.
>
> My projection is based on what I believe may be achievable in the next 12
> months and showing why a min COP of 20 is needed for a thermal MW class
> LENR plant with a capex of $1.50 / thermal watt to achieve a LCOE of around
> $0.02 / Ac kWh. As you should well know, in the end it is all about ROI. A
> LENR plant will need to show a superior ROI and significantly lower LCOE
> than any other Ac kWh generation technology or no one will take a change on
> it and it will be business as usual.
>
> AG
>
>
> On 11/30/2011 2:14 PM, Mary Yugo wrote:
>
>
>>
>> On Tue, Nov 29, 2011 at 7:30 PM, Aussie Guy E-Cat <
>> [email protected] 
>> <mailto:aussieguy.ecat@gmail.**com<[email protected]>>>
>> wrote:
>>
>>
>>    4) Total plant cost (thermal and electrical) of $2,500,000 for a 1
>>    MW thermal plant that produces 183 Ac kW after internal usage / losses
>>
>>
>>
>> Playing the game for a moment, why does the thing have to cost $2.5M?
>>  Does it really look to you as if it has millions of dollars of materials
>> and fabrication in it?  If this thing is real, I bet it can be made for
>> much less in the megawatt size or for the same price but then it would be a
>> much larger, more powerful device.    Just because Rossi says it's limited
>> to some 10 kW or less per core doesn't mean it's so indefinitely.
>>
>> But of course, all of this hand wringing about costs is very premature.
>>  It's a bit like worrying what to feed invisible unicorns.
>>
>
>

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