Uh Shaun, wet steam is physical impossibility. All water boilers on Earth
produce 99-95 dry steam, including Krivit's water boiler. You need to go
high pressures and high steam velocities in order to produce stable wet
steam. So please, at least you should get the basic physics right.

     —Jouni
On Jan 21, 2012 1:25 PM, "Shaun Taylor" <shauntaylor...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On 21/01/2012 9:28 PM, John Milstone wrote:
>
>> For what it's worth, here are the relevant links I have on Rossi's
>> claims of having been working with the University of Bologna...
>>
>> June 18, 2011, Rossi says, "In these days, together with the
>> University of Bologna and with my Customers, we have made tests
>> measuring not only dry steam, but also with really , really, REALLY
>> high performances: they know, I know, we know. That’s enough."
>> (http://www.journal-of-**nuclear-physics.com/?p=360&**
>> cpage=21#comment-47001<http://www.journal-of-nuclear-physics.com/?p=360&cpage=21#comment-47001>
>> )
>>
>
> Dry steam with really high performance Rossi said???? Well when Krivit
> made his visit and video 
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?**v=m-8QdVwY98E<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m-8QdVwY98E>on
>  14 June 2011, the steam was very, very, VERY wet and not coming out in
> the volume or speed one would expect from turning 7 kg of water into steam
> every hour. 11:30 in the video.
>
> Something must have really, really, REALLY changed in 4 days.
>
> Maybe Rossi thinks Prof Levi and Prof Focardi working privately in his
> laboratory is the same thing as the University of Bologna doing the work.
> That was until the University made it VERY clear they had never officially
> done any work for Rossi and this would not happen until he paid them what
> he had agreed to pay them. As we know, that did not happen.
>
> So Rossi is caught out in yet another lie. Yea I know, just another
> translation error.
>
> Shaun
>
>

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