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/
>>>

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