Robert 

 

*  Before the courts determine a victor, who will the "people" identify as
the inventor? I believe that it may just come down to "branding". So, if
Nickel Hydrogen really takes off, who gets the credit?

 

The first Ni-H device to achieve significant excess energy (> 10 watts
continuous) and to run for a year in OU mode, and which was completely
verified by NASA, and Haldeman at MIT - was the Thermacore reactor, based on
Mills' theory and invented by Gernert, Shauback, and Ernst.

 

Those three: Gernert, Shauback, and Ernst  should get full credit IMO - not
Piantelli, not Focardi, not Rossi, not even Mills who was technically the
first theorist of Ni-H. 

 

These three guys have not only the legal priority date, but also the first
replicated, strong, continuous results with gas phase hydrogen. (there was
prior subwatt transitory results)

 

As we have mentioned here before, their reactor got more energy per unit of
Nickel surface area than the current Rossi reactor, and had not Thermacore
gone through merger and corporate reorganization about this time fame (mid
nineties) the inventors would surely have tried "nanometric" nickel - which
was Rossi's main contribution. Note Piantelli was late on 'nano' too. Rossi
does not even get credit for the "nano" since Mills used Raney nickel - by
Mills neglected gas-phase. 

 

Why did Mills steer clear of gas-phase? ANS: probably he saw early on that
the reactants became slowly radioactive, and RM had spurned LENR since the
beginning. 

 

Thermacore Patent   5,273,635   December 28, 1993 This has the World wide
priority date and it has expired.

 

Inventors: Gernert; Nelson J. (Elizabethtown, PA); Shaubach; Robert M.
(Litiz, PA); Ernst; Donald M. (Leola, PA)

 

Note: Randell Mills is NOT listed as co-inventor. 

 

Jones

 

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