http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p2tuk31pS2M&feature=player_embedded

The cannon video

Cheers:  Axil

On Thu, Mar 7, 2013 at 10:06 PM, Jones Beene <[email protected]> wrote:

> In the history of the Josef Papp saga, Gene Mallove took a special interest
> in a few details that are not well-known.
>
> There was a video of a US Navy military sponsored explosion, a "cannon"
> reported by Gene to have used Papp's technology. I haven't seen the video,
> but it is available from IE. What would be more interesting than a poor
> video (but we can only guess what is reported) is the actual Navy report of
> this test. Maybe someone should put in a FOI request for it.
>
>
> http://www.infinite-energy.com/store/index.php?main_page=product_info&produc
> ts_id=85<http://www.infinite-energy.com/store/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=85>
>
> Historically, it looks like there could have been a number of explosions of
> radium compounds that were more intense than chemical reactions but much of
> that info is not online since it goes back in time over 100 years.
>
> http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=457526
>
>
> http://libserv23.princeton.edu/princetonperiodicals/cgi-bin/princetonperiodi
> cals?a=d&d=Princetonian19360418-01.2.4&e=-------en-20--1--txt-IN-----<http://libserv23.princeton.edu/princetonperiodicals/cgi-bin/princetonperiodicals?a=d&d=Princetonian19360418-01.2.4&e=-------en-20--1--txt-IN----->
>
> In addition to a short half life, radium is extremely chemically reactive.
> This could be a clue in what is going on in a radium-powered engine, as the
> patent describes. In CANR the idea has been around for a long time that
> chemical reactions can cause(catalyze) nuclear reactions, or speed up
> nuclear decay by many orders of magnitude.
>
> The first reliable  instance of this phenomena is found in the deuterium
> chloride "trigger" for the first device developed at Los Alamos in the
> 1940s. This was the "Kistiakowsky trigger" named after Dr. K - the Head of
> the Explosives Division of the Manhattan Project. The chlorine must
> "photo-activated" to cause deuterium to release neutrons, possibly by
> "stripping."
>
> Can radium chloride be "triggered" like DCl when the photo-activation is
> arc
> discharge or sparks?  Who knows, but if so - Radium is three million times
> as radioactive as the same mass of uranium. Plus its decay product - radon
> is far more radioactive than radium. If there is such a beast as
> "accelerated" decay due to CANR, then this could explain most of the Papp
> mystery - including the desert Cannon explosion.
>
> There are reasons to suspect that Papp was able to get a radium powered
> engine to work, and that after the Feynman affair, he never could use
> radium
> again. Many would like to believe that a Papp engine operated without
> radium
> after the Feynman affair - but I see zero proof of that. There were tests
> which were seen, but like Feynman said - it is not too hard to put
> batteries
> into an oversized crankcase.
>
> There is a lingering suspicion that after the fatality -  CalTech could
> have
> been using the radioactivity, discovered from the explosion - in legal
> maneuvers against Papp,  in order to force the plaintiffs into a
> settlement.
> There are probably a few people still around LA that could stir up that
> ball
> of snakes.
>
> Jones
>
>
>
>

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