On Wed, May 29, 2013 at 7:29 AM, Bob Higgins <rj.bob.higg...@gmail.com>wrote:

>
>    - We are told that the central reactor core is a 310 stainless steel
>    cylinder ( 3cm by 33cm).  There is no port for introduction of H2.  The
>    ends are cold welded closed.
>
> The ends were cone-shaped AISI 316 steel caps that were "hot-hammered"
into the ends.  I don't think they were welded.

>
>
>
>    - When the test device was sawed open, only a miniscule amount of
>    powder came out.  This cannot be the active powder - it would have melted
>    as loose powder rather than conveying the heat out of the cylinder.
>
> I don't think any nickel charge came out when they opened the device.
 Apparently the nickel charge was carried in one or more 33 mm x 3 mm
cylinders, which were opened and the contents weighed.  If the Hot-Cat HT
is anything like the device tested in August 2012, the inside looks like
the image shown on page 6 of [1].  Notice that there is putty sealant that
does produce a kind of powder.

[1]
http://coldfusionnow.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/105322688-Penon4-1.pdf

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