Could another team make another test with McKubre &other advices ?

I'm afraid Rossi is tired of that, but it would help the others groups too.

Maybe is it useless, as business circles seems aware...
but what about citizen...

the problem is to find volunteer that are ok to ruin their career but who
are not yet flagged as LENR scientists.


2014-10-14 10:22 GMT+02:00 Peter Gluck <[email protected]>:

> Dear Jed,
>
> See please the  1 =0 Rule-
> http://egooutpeters.blogspot.ro/2013/05/the-1-0-rule-generalized.html
>
> I have learned it from the failures in actual tecghnological research.
>
> Just now it seems an error that all the nickel eggs were put in a single
> alumina basket.
>
> I think that performing three consecutive & parallel experiments in
> different conditions - according to some logic and plan would have been
> increased the performance three times, at only 10% increased effort, 60%
> increased expenses and 10 times more muzzles put to the Rossi killers.
>
> Peter
>
>
> On Tue, Oct 14, 2014 at 1:05 AM, Jed Rothwell <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> See:
>>
>> http://www.infinite-energy.com/iemagazine/issue118/analysis.html
>>
>>
>> Jed's opinion:
>>
>> I completely agree with everything McKubre says here about the
>> calorimetry. I share his reservations. I agree with the rest of this report
>> except the nuclear theory is partly over my head. No opinion about that.
>>
>> I like this statement:
>>
>> "One experimental result equates to zero experimental results. Nothing in
>> science can be known without repetition."
>>
>>
>> Very true and people often forget it. Or, as I have been saying,
>> definitive experiments only happen in Hollywood movies.
>>
>> McKubre emphasizes the need for more communication from the authors. Yes!
>> That would be a big help. I hope the authors respond to the questions here:
>>
>>
>> http://www.lenr-forum.com/forum/index.php/Thread/722-Ask-questions-to-the-Working-Group-ECAT-long-term-test/
>>
>> Especially I hope they respond to *my* questions. I will be nervous
>> about this experiment until they say the cell was incandescent white. That
>> is the simplest way to confirm that the temperature really was around
>> 1300°C. The photograph in Fig. 12 shows it around 700°C, judging by the
>> dull red color. See:
>>
>>
>> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incandescence#mediaviewer/File:Incandescence_Color.jpg
>>
>> I do not know when they took that photo.
>>
>> - Jed
>>
>>
>
>
> --
> Dr. Peter Gluck
> Cluj, Romania
> http://egooutpeters.blogspot.com
>

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