First Saturday afternoon presenter was Mizuno being represented by a young 
Japanese scientist. Their reactor : nickle mesh surface prepped by exposure to 
plasma discharge. Reactor consists of prepped nickel mesh heated by resistance 
with pressurized deuterium gas. The device able to measure the composition of 
gases by atomic number in real time. Results: 1) excess heat as soon as 
deuterium pumped in ie no loading needed. 2) 75 watts excess heat over thirty 
five days. 3) gas composition monitored during run (as atomic number): 4 (D 2) 
progressively decreased 3 (?tritium- they couldn't say) rose and fell as an 
intermediate product,  2 (that would be H2 or atomic D) rose as the final 
product. How does that fit in, smart dudes?

Steve High

On Mar 22, 2014, at 1:41 PM, "MarkI-ZeroPoint" <zeropo...@charter.net> wrote:

> Steve:
> Just want to thank you, as I think all Vorts do, for providing the updates
> from MIT...
> The 150 attendance is good to see... 
> B Well,
> -Mark Iverson
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Steve High [mailto:diamondweb...@gmail.com] 
> Sent: Saturday, March 22, 2014 10:05 AM
> To: Vortex
> Subject: [Vo]:MIT colloquium
> 
> The event is well attended. I would estimate 150 heads about 90 % grey. Ruby
> Carat and Alien Scientist are here recording the proceedings. Curiously
> Hadjichristos was on the agenda but his name has been stricken, leaving a
> void as far as the "kilowatt output" performers are concerned. Celani had
> two interesting things to say. He's finding evidence that the fiberglass
> insulators he's wrapping around his constantan wires seem to tremendously
> augment the anomalous heat output based on the observation that glass seems
> to be able to sequester hydrogen on its surface in a way that makes it more
> available to the constantan. He also mentioned that his Boss completely
> terminated funding for his CF research last fall but that an angel jumped in
> and he's back in the saddle at least for now
> 
> Steve High
> 

Reply via email to