Probably; in any case, it would be an improvement. The majority of the paper is 
taken up by detailed calculations on the thermal emissions from the device - 
i.e. on the output side.

On re-reading the paper, I'm struck by a detail from the March 116 hour test. 
When the input is on, the power supplied exactly matches (up to error bars) the 
output power, namely about 820 W. I for one find this a curious data point. 
It's stated that there's a 35% duty cycle on the input, and for that reason 
alone we get an over-unity COP result. The TRIAC-based control box appears to 
have two modes - auto and manual (the paper makes no attempt to help us 
understand this). In auto mode, there's a switchover to pulsed mode but it's 
unclear what triggers this. I can only assume it's due to sensing the resistor 
temperature indirectly via a resistance estimate. In manual mode, the authors 
describe setting the power level, so presumably this is also an externally 
available control on the box. But who knows, really? And what is really 
happening during the OFF state of the waveform? If power is being snuck into 
the device here, then the COP = 1, and there is no magic. Note that, if this be 
the case, then it doesn't matter if you run the device for a day or a year; you 
will always measure over-unity COP even though the real COP is unity.

When they describe the dummy measurements, they mention placing the meter in 
single phase mode directly across the resistor feed wires (it's single phase 
for the March test). They therefore have access to that place electronically. 
So in principle, they could have attached a spectrum analyser and a scope. But 
they didn't, because it wasn't allowed in pulsed mode; they were only allowed 
to do it in manual mode. 

Andrew
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Eric Walker 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Sunday, May 26, 2013 12:02 AM
  Subject: Re: [Vo]:The inanity of the hidden input power hypothesis


  On Sat, May 25, 2013 at 11:54 PM, Andrew <[email protected]> wrote:


    The only way to convince the scientific community is via evidence.


  They will be carrying out a much longer experiment in the future.  If they 
were to have an electrical engineer take a close look at the input power across 
the entire range of interest and rule out input fake, after which they were to 
report results similar to the ones that were reported this time around, would 
this be considered adequate evidence for a prima facie conclusion that Rossi's 
device is producing excess heat?


  Eric

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