In conformance with standard DOD security procedures, I speculate that the US Navy is keeping a high security wall between the military version of the E-Cat and Rossi’s civilian E-Cat version. However, Rossi must have gotten an indication that the Military E-Cat has achieved stable operations at high temperatures and in that knowledge Rossi has found through trial and error the proper new “functional additives” supporting stable operations. This new secret sauce maintains thermal stability by peeking out in its thermionic emissions at a definite fixed ceiling temperature.
>From his past work experience on thermionic devices, Rossi must now realize that thermionic electron emissions produced by his secret sauce is at the heart of what make his reactor go. Knowing this fact, there is a fixed number of these protonated thermionic emotive coulomb nano-cluster compounds in this world and he has stumbled in his single-minded trial and error manner on the right one, or at least a stable one. Cheers: Axil On Sat, May 5, 2012 at 7:40 PM, David Roberson <[email protected]> wrote: > Actually I think he has always mentioned that the device goes unstable at > high temperatures. Correct me if I am wrong. > > Dave > > > -----Original Message----- > From: Terry Blanton <[email protected]> > To: vortex-l <[email protected]> > Sent: Sat, May 5, 2012 5:52 pm > Subject: Re: [Vo]:High-temperature eCat ? > > And I remember when he said that there was no stability problem. > > T > > >

