If average power over 228 hours is 14.337 KW, and the total charge is 20 g, then shouldn't the power density be:
14337 / 20 = 716 watts/gm = 716 kw / kg Craig On 10/12/2012 01:15 PM, Arnaud Kodeck wrote: > Why Rossi is taking energy produced per weight as a power density ? In the > report he says : > > "POWER DENSITY > > 163,4 MW*kg^-1 (onehundred sixtythree point four MWh > per kg) > (see the Ragone Plot at pag. 15 of the Penon Report > attached)" > > He should have called that the energy density which has no meaning here > cause there are still energy to release of its cylinder ... > > It seems, he is always confusing energy and power. With its kWh/h unity > which for means nothing physical. > >> -----Original Message----- >> From: Arnaud Kodeck [mailto:[email protected]] >> Sent: vendredi 12 octobre 2012 19:06 >> To: '[email protected]' >> Subject: RE: [Vo]:Hot Cat COP 11.7 >> >> If claim of Rossi are right, the power density per gram of >> powder is awesome 596.85 W/g ( (14337-2400)/20 ) >> >> Celani's wire is around ~70 W/g >> >>> -----Original Message----- >>> From: Terry Blanton [mailto:[email protected]] >>> Sent: vendredi 12 octobre 2012 18:37 >>> To: [email protected] >>> Subject: [Vo]:Hot Cat COP 11.7 >>> >>> http://www.e-catworld.com/2012/10/leonardo-corp-releases-new-h >>> ot-cat-report/ >>>

