If there are neutrons emitted, then everything becomes activated, and this 
reactor cannot be used on an airplane, as suggested. In the Wiki entry

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aneutronic_fusion

 

…there are two deuterium possibilities. But even those have secondary neutrons.

 

This does not necessarily suggest LENR as they are talking plasma - and the 
only reason to even think it could be a hybrid - was the mention of 
“ultra-dense” deuterium… which is probably the product of bad technical writing.

 

Heck, these guys were part of the Glomar explorer team, and everything else 
secret. Maybe they found ultra-dense deuterium  5 miles down in the Pacific and 
are finally letting the rest of us in on it :-)

 

 

From: Robert Dorr 


Watching the video makes me a bit suspicious of the no radiation claim. High 
temperature fusion, magnetically bottled in a small container. Seems to me the 
container will eventually become radioactive.



The video is pretty

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded 
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=UlYClniDFkM> 
&v=UlYClniDFkM

 

but sparse technical details. Looks a lot like they added magnetic coils to the 
Farnsworth Fusor.

 

I want to know about the ultra-dense deuterium…

 

 

 

From: Robert Dorr 


Makes you wonder if this is LENR related. 100 megawatts from a reactor that 
fits on a truck, and no radioactive waste!!! Hmmm....

Robert Dorr




 

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