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http://www.financialpost.com/markets/news/BlackLight+Power+Announces+Game+Changing+Achievement+Generation+Millions/9384649/story.html



Regarding the statement:



“The disclosure of one of BlackLight’s patent application that was
recently-filed worldwide, its 10 MW electric SF-CIHT cell system
engineering design and simulation, high-speed video of millions of watts of
supersonically expanding SF-CIHT cell plasma…”





This says to me that the SF-CIHT is a pulsed system featuring a
instantaneous high powered plasma pulse.


On Wed, Jan 15, 2014 at 10:31 AM, Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote:

> In a pulsed system, the peak power might only be produced for a small
> fraction of a second…like what happens in an explosion.
>
> The average power is a function of the repetition rate of the pulse. It
> might be that the power produced by the SF-CIHT cell comes mostly from the
> near instantaneous expansion of the water plasma.
>
> If this power production mechanism is the case, the SF-CIHT must be
> engineered to capture all of this explosive force and convert it into
> electric power.
>
> IMHO, this energy conversion process is best done in a reciprocating
> piston engine design…as in the PAPP engine.
>
> You never see the power produced by explosive fuels like gasoline and
> diesel fuel captured using direct electrostatic and magnetohydrodynamic
> (MHD) conversion as Mills wants to do.
>
> But Aircraft do use turbine designs to move lots of air but then jet
> engines are not pulsed systems.
>
>
> On Wed, Jan 15, 2014 at 10:09 AM, Jed Rothwell <[email protected]>wrote:
>
>> I wrote:
>>
>>
>>> I do not think it is possible for such a small object to produce a
>>> megawatt of power. It would melt.
>>>
>>
>> Even if it were pure electricity this would not be possible without a
>> superconducting cable. There is a shopping mall near my house. When you go
>> in the back entrance you pass the power supplies. I think they are about 1
>> MW. The transformers and distribution cables are huge.
>>
>> Maybe this means 1 MW peak power? In a spark or something? Who knows.
>>
>> - Jed
>>
>>
>

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