Harry Veeder <[email protected]> wrote:

An elecrochemical environment might simply be more complex and so the
> power produced is more erractic.


That's true. And fluctuations are not desirable. This could be a sign of
progress, and not a sign of an artifact.

Rossi's heat is also pretty stable. I am pretty sure that is real heat, at
least in the graphs that have been published. It wasn't working when NASA
was there. I have no idea what that data looked like. As I read in a
medical report long ago, the absence of pulse was present.



> A notable exception is "heat after
> death" when an electrolyte boils away and becomes more like a Celani
> wire in a gaseous environment.
>

Good point. Still, it fluctuates after a while, as shown in Fig. 7 here:

http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/PonsSheatafterd.pdf

- Jed

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