Abd ul-Rahman Lomax <[email protected]> wrote:

> The Fleischmann-Pons Heat effect is the result of the conversion of
> deuterium to helium, at least primarily.
>

Probably.

Look, this is not complicated. As you say, it seems likely that Pd-D is a
fusion reaction. McKubre and I believe that whatever the other reactions
are, they are probably related. It seems unlikely there are multiple
unrelated ways of producing heat with hydrides that of all been discovered
recently. We call this the conservation of miracles which is a humorous way
to express a serious idea. It is not rigorous proof but it seems logical to
us. You disagree. Okay. We got it.

The fact that hydrogen fusion is more difficult than deuterium fusion
strikes me as unimportant. Both of them are extremely unlikely according to
conventional theory. Who cares if one is extremely unlikely and the other
is superduper extraordinarily extremely unlikely? Theory goes out the
window either way.

- Jed

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