I just noticed a curious detail about the Cravens NI-Week demo which we have
been talking about, but which many have overlooked in importance ... and
especially one particular datum of info.

http://www.infinite-energy.com/images/pdfs/NIWeekCravens.pdf

On page 3, Dennis explains "lnside the sphere is a hydrogen storage
material. We used material taken from a commercial fuel cell storage metal
(Hydrofil) that was loaded with deuterium."

As best I can tell from online sources, the storage metal used in this
Hydrofill cartridge is known as proprietary AB5, but in reality is the
generic hydrogen storage alloy- LaNi5 which is lanthanum penta-nickel. 

Whoa... that rings a bell so to speak. This material was predicted some time
ago to be active on its own for thermal gain in reversible storage
situations due to one special property. That property would be in addition
to lanthanum being almost exactly the mass-energy of the Higgs boson :-)

http://www.micromeritics.com/Repository/Files/The_Heat_of_Adsorption_of_Hydr
ogen_Gas_on_Lanthanum_Pentanickel.pdf
Here are several far-out predictions based on gut feeling and 6th sense
intuition based somewhat on Higgs and somewhat on nanomagnetism - 

1)      Cravens device depends on the unique chemisorption properties of
LaNi5 combined with a magnetic material - and will not produce as much
excess heat with any other hydrogen storage material, but will work with H2
as well or better than with D2.
2)      Rossi's HotCat also uses LaNi5 for hydrogen storage in connection
with a magnetic device in the form of a heating coil, and will not produce
as much excess heat with any other hydrogen storage material.
                
Thanks to Jack Cole for noticing this detail about LaNi5 last year. 

Apparently the trick is to use LaNi5 in the context of a magnetic field,
assuming of course that this is premonition is correct.

Where are you Jack? If these hunches are close, then we may have almost
cracked the mystery. If not, and it comes up short once again... well... we
can call it a 5th sense... :-)

Jones

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