Good question, Steven. The answer is no. The reason for this answer comes from 
the inability to identify and measure all the variables that influence the LENR 
process. In fact, until recently I did not know which variables were important. 
 I can now identify the important variables, but money is required to use 
equipment necessary to see what is actually happening at the nano level. 

LENR is complex and not consistent with how hot fusion behaves. Unfortunately, 
the people who attempt to explain the effect have not identified the correct 
variables. As a result, people have been wondering aimlessly in the wilderness 
in search of the gold. A few people have found nuggets by chance, but the main 
ore body is still hidden. Rossi is as close as anyone to finding the main ore 
body, but he is not telling where his gold outcrop is located. I'm trying to 
follow his trail.

Ed Storms


On Mar 9, 2014, at 11:29 AM, OrionWorks - Steven Vincent Johnson wrote:

> From Jed:
>  
> ...
>  
> > Storms pre-tested 92 cathodes. He found 4 that passed all tests, and he ran
> > a full cold fusion experiment on those 4. They all produced robust heat
> > repeatedly. So, was that 92 tests, or was it 4? Was the success rate 4%,
> > or 100%? Those question are silly. It is what it is.
> >
> > The effect has been reproduced many, many times. If it were any other
> > experiment, no one would express the slightest doubt that it is real.
> > That's all there is to it.
>  
> I apologize up front if this seems an ignorant question to ask at this late 
> hour, but did Storms learn enough about the unique makeup of the four 
> successful cathodes to acquire a fairly good idea as to how to go about 
> building new cathodes that would reliably, consistently, and repeatedly 
> generate excess heat 100% of the time?
>  
> I have no doubt that Storms has a goal of generating excess heat 
> consistently, reliably, and repeatedly a primary goal.
>  
> I’m also assuming securing adequate funding remains one of the major 
> impediments that continues to define the on-going CF/LENR saga for the past 
> quarter of a century.
>  
> Regards,
> Steven Vincent Johnson
> svjart.OrionWorks.com
> www.zazzle.com/orionworks
> tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/newvortex/
>  

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