Did the testing team check the electrical power provided by Rossi’s team?

Is ground the ground?

Are all 3 phases, the 3 phases at 120° each? (Are all that 3 phases
effectively measured by the PCE-830 ?)

Is the neutral the neutral?

What are the voltages? (Between phases, between phase and neutral, neutral
and ground)

Is the frequency at 50 Hz?

 

They don’t say anything about that in the report. A highly qualified team in
a full week should have had a look at that.

  _____  

From: James Bowery [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: mardi 21 mai 2013 23:19
To: vortex-l
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Levi Hot Cat paper is a gem

 

The strongest technical argument for the veracity of this report is that the
power measured going into the device is 360W and that the way it was
measured was from the wall socket through an industry standard power
analyzer (PCE-830 Power and Harmonics Analyzer by PCE Instruments).
Detractors assert that as the test was conducted on the premises of the
company licensing the technology EFA srl, therefore Rossi could have
defrauded the investigators by hidden camera, or other spy device, observing
when to apply a hidden AC power source of such high frequency, overlaid on
the normal power, that it would have been undetectable by the PCE-830. This
assertion about the PCE-830's limitations has not been validated as
plausible by PCE Instruments or any other authority.

 

On Mon, May 20, 2013 at 9:09 PM, Jed Rothwell <[email protected]> wrote:

I just read this paper for the third time. This is a gem. These people think
and write like engineers rather than scientists. That is a complement coming
from me. They dot every i and cross every t. I can't think of a single thing
I wish they had checked but did not.

 

In ever instance, their assumptions are conservative. Where there is any
chance of mismeasuring something, they assume the lowest possible value for
output, and the highest value for input. They assume emissivity is 1 even
though it is obviously lower (and therefore output is higher). The add in
every possible source of input, whereas any factor that might increase
output but which cannot be measured exactly is ignored. For example, they
know that emissivity from the sides of the cylinder close to 90 degrees away
from the camera is undermeasured (because it is at an angle), but rather
than try to take that into account, they do the calculation as if all
surfaces are at 0 degrees, flat in front of the camera. In the first set of
tests they know that the support frame blocks the IR camera partly, casting
a shadow and reducing output, but they do not try to take than into account.

 

Furthermore, this is a pure black box test, exactly what the skeptics and
others have been crying out for. They make no assumptions about the nature
of the reaction or the content of the cylinder. They make no adjustments for
it; the heat is measured the same way you would measure an electrically
heated cylinder or a cylinder with a gas flame inside it. It is hands-off in
the literal sense, with only the thermocouples touching the cell, and the
rest at a distance, including the clamp on ammeter which placed below the
power supply. You do not have to know anything about the reaction to be sure
these measurements are right. There is nothing Rossi could possibly do to
fool these instruments, which the authors brought with them. They left a
video camera on the instruments at all times to ensure there was no
hanky-panky. They wrote:


"The clamp ammeters were connected upstream from the control box to ensure
the trustworthiness of the measurements performed, and to produce a
nonfalsifiable document (the video recording) of the measurements
themselves."

 

They estimate the extent to which the heat exceeds the limits of chemistry
by both the mass of the cell and the volume of the cell. In the first test,
they use the entire weight of the inside cell as the starting point, rather
than just the powder, as if stainless steel might be the reactant. In the
second test they determine that the powder weighs ~0.3 g but they round that
up to 1 g.

 

They use Martin Fleischmann's favorite method of looking at the heat decay
curves when the power cycles off. Plot 5 clearly shows that the heat does
not decay according to Newton's law of cooling. There must be a heat
producing reaction in addition to the electric heater.

 

I like it!

 

- Jed

 

 

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