From: Roarty, Francis X 

 

[snip] I have toyed with the idea of a submerged tube of hydrogen being
circulated in a closed loop where a small vertical section acting as reactor
which is filled with nano powders, backfilled nickel foam or this cobalt
loaded zeolite you mention.   

Fran

 

Fran - Sounds almost like a true aquarium from a true Aquarian, but H2
flowing through, instead of air. Go for it. 

 

BTW - solid-state H2 pumps are available, with high pressure capability and
no moving parts (not cheap). As you have mentioned in your blog, there could
be a distinct advantage to flow-thru in any Casimir-based system . which is
seldom done in practice in Ni-H - Moddel's null results notwithstanding. You
are no doubt basing everything theoretical on a Casimir understanding - and
that should break new ground.

 

And there should be little doubt about thermal gain, even if small - if you
find thermal rise in a water-filled tank which is over and above input
power. Problem would be maintaining a trigger temperature in the reactor
itself, but with flow-thru, some gain could possibly happen without the
higher temp trigger. That would be an Arata-style hybrid. Arata found small
gain from pressurization alone.

 

One curious fact, if you go the route of a thermal trigger - Nick Reiter
finds the same ~350C trigger temperature seen in most all of Ahern's work
with nickel alloys, and yet cobalt has a much higher Curie point. It is
almost as if the "350C" is related to another physical property as well.
hmmm.. De Broglie wave coherence or quantum Zeno effect or ??

 

Why do I get this weird retro-feeling of a new dawning for the Age of
Aquarius ? 

 

Jones

 

BTW - the youth of today is almost oblivious to it - and there is no
agreement on the myth of a so-called Aquarian age (or even if it really
started back in the big-hair days) but an "Aquarian reactor" could be a
marker deluxe. and with Avalon biker providing a decent new-age script .
say, isn't that the "5th Dimension" blowing through the windmills of my
mind? 

 

Oh no! not a new ear-wig . Mystic crystal revelation and the mind's true
liberation. yikes.

 

 

_____________________________________________

 

Update for anyone with aspirations of seeing a robust excess heat effect
with Zeolites, using the Reiter effect (cobalt loading).

 

Amazon actually caries a cobalt loaded zeolite material - used as aquarium
filter media. 

 

 <http://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listing/B005QRHM5I>
http://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listing/B005QRHM5I

 

This is not a joke - but I have no illusions that this product could work in
the same robust way as Nick's material, since it probably has minimal cobalt
- but it's a bargain, and the ease of operation with a good calorimeter.
even one from Thermonetics, no less, could be worth a shot for anyone with
more time than money. 

 

Hmm . Kinda like owning a Yugo.

 

 <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg62560.html>
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg62560.html

 

LOL. Had to throw Mary a bone, so to speak - since he/she does make a good
device.

 

Wouldn't it be a hoot if someone were to use a simple Amazon aquarium filter
media, a pipe reactor, KH and heating tape - and a Thermonetics calorimeter
to show unmistakable excess heat . in a lowest common denominator system. 

 

It could happen, folks.

 

Jones

 

_____________________________________________

Thanks, Ruby. 

 

These are old slides (2008) are interesting in the context of
palladium-deuterium. But there is no real anomaly to get excited about
there. This is similar to the NRL work with zeolites. Yawn.

 

The caption under both experiments could be labeled as "so close, but so far
away" since they had the "Casimir cavity" part of the equation correct
(using zeolite), but not the active ingredients. Palladium deuterium is not
a Casimir-cavity influenced reaction - that much is clear. 

 

OTOH. hydrogen is.

 

I was hoping that there would have been information more pertinent to the
"Reiter effect" with cobalt and hydrogen in zeolite, mentioned recently here
as the "ZeoCat", but that was wishful thinking.

 

 
<https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&pid=sites&srcid=ZGVmYXVsdGRvbWFpbnxvaGlv
dG9pb3xneDpjZGMzM2VjNGQwY2ExZDc&pli=1>
https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&pid=sites&srcid=ZGVmYXVsdGRvbWFpbnxvaGlvd
G9pb3xneDpjZGMzM2VjNGQwY2ExZDc&pli=1

BTW - As of today, not yet October - the ZeoCat of Nick Reiter looks to me
like the most important open source experiment in LENR in the sense of: easy
to do, but with robust results, begging for replication, and begging for
enhancements.

 

 

From: Ruby 
As far as I know, there is only slides from his presentation at ICCF-14 by
New Energy Times.

You must scroll down on this page to find his name

 
<http://newenergytimes.com/v2/conferences/2008/ICCF14/ICCMNS-14-Recordings.s
html>
http://newenergytimes.com/v2/conferences/2008/ICCF14/ICCMNS-14-Recordings.sh
tml


Here is the direct download for the New Energy Times .pdf:

 
<http://newenergytimes.com/v2/conferences/2008/ICCF14/Pres/14-Parchamazad-Na
noparticles.pdf>
http://newenergytimes.com/v2/conferences/2008/ICCF14/Pres/14-Parchamazad-Nan
oparticles.pdf


Ruby


Jones Beene wrote:

The only paper I've found for him is with Biberian:

 

 <http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/BiberianJPpossiblero.pdf>
http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/BiberianJPpossiblero.pdf

 

and it hardly mentions zeolites. Is there another?

 

Jones

 

 

From: Ruby 


I edited an under-23-minute video of Dr. Iraj Parchamazad Chemistry Chairman
of University of LaVerne talking about his research into anomalous heat
reactions using nano-palladium loaded zeolites exposed to deuterium gas.

 <http://coldfusionnow.org/iraj-parchamazad-lenr-with-zeolites/>
http://coldfusionnow.org/iraj-parchamazad-lenr-with-zeolites/

Enjoy!

-- 
Ruby Carat

 

 

 

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