The reason Rossi is using a 3 phases power supply might be the rotating
field created by a 3 phases AC power supply.

 

  _____  

From: Robert Lynn [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: jeudi 16 octobre 2014 11:09
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Vo]:temperature of the resistor wire.

 

All fair points of view Dave.  Though with regard to 3 phase, at 900W input
there is obviously no need, adds a lot of mechanical complexity (3 heater
wires rather than 1) and a little more electrical complexity and would still
get impulsive waveform using rectified DC + half H bridge to provide an ac
pwm output - really simple linear power control that is dead simple to
measure and control power output of, with much greater scope for variation
of pulse frequency and duration.  I doubt you or any other engineer or
electrician would choose to do it the crude and restrictive way he has.

 

Haven't tackled the electrical side of things much; but as an EE would you
agree that conceptually it would be possible to hide a >10kHz AC signal
superimposed on the grid supplied 3phase with amplitude a little less than
the AC so as not to trigger the Triac turn off?  (Hardware pretty simple,
just 50% duty cycle driven half-H bridge of phase added to the 50Hz signal
by means of a series transformer).  My rough calculation suggest that could
allow 3x the power to be delivered to the reactor without showing up on the
PCE meter or having any DC component.  Not that I think it likely (far too
much potential for getting caught by someone with a multimeter or
oscilloscope), but if the power meters were known to have a max frequency
threshold then could this allow you to deliver more power without it being
easily spotted?

 

On 16 October 2014 16:12, David Roberson <[email protected]> wrote:

Sorry Robert, I will make every attempt to use your correct name in the
future.  Thanks for clarifying your reasons for exhibiting the strong
critical position against the report.

I admit that I harbor questions about the accuracy of the temperature
measurements for many of the reasons that you point out.  To me the slope in
COP with temperature and the particle analysis are strong indicators that
the device is generating some type of nuclear power within its core.  I can
not honestly believe that Rossi would be attempting a scam as you seem to
think...he risks far too much.  One tiny slip and he is toast.

I recall reading in his blog that Ni62 was the active element from a couple
of years back.  At that time he was talking of developing a process that
enriched the raw material in order to achieve that goal.  Could that have
been what he thought was happening within his reactor at the time?  That
would explain why he bought some of that isotope for research.  I give him
the benefit of the doubt.

The 3 phase power concern just does not hold water to me.  Remember the
device tested is not normally used in isolation, but instead is a part of a
much larger system.  Phase balancing is quite common when a large amount of
power is required and I would likely have done exactly the same thing as
Rossi.

There are other reasons that I believe the test proves that power is
generated within the core that I have covered previously and will not repeat
at this time since it is late here.

Dave

 

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Robert Lynn <[email protected]>
To: vortex-l <[email protected]>

Sent: Thu, Oct 16, 2014 2:20 am
Subject: Re: [Vo]:temperature of the resistor wire.

(Dave, my granddad is Bob, I'm Robert :) ), I would be over the moon if we
had incontrovertible evidence of >COP, but with a strong grounding in and
respect for the scientific method you cannot and should not ever give bold
assertions a free ride without vigorous critical review the skeptics of the
world won't go any easier on him than I will.  Which is what I am trying to
provide, and unfortunately the harder I have looked at it and the more
issues I have analysed the more likely it seems that the gain = 1 hypothesis
is as strong as gain >1. 

 

Occams razor would then favour gain=1 rather than a collection of
miraculously fortuitous LENR characteristics that include numerous
transmutation pathways (fission and fusion of Ni and Li) without ionising
radiation, or change in reaction rate as it goes from natural isotope ratios
to essentially all Li6+Ni2,  But my suspicions really shot through the roof
after reading that Rossi bought 99% Ni62 from a commercial supplier at one
point - and that is why I decided to look so hard at the physical attributes
of the device (thermodynamics/hightemp materials are my forte) - to see
whether it was thermodynamically unabiguous that there was gain >1.

 

The needless ambiguity of the test raises my ire, that the power input is so
clumsily measured when it would be so easy to use series resistors, triac
switched single phase AC, PWM DC power supply or etc with the same
electromagnetic effects within the reactor.  Rossi with his resources could
get someone to make such an unambiguous power supply/meter in a day - but as
usual he has chosen the dark path of deliberate obfuscation.  Likewise with
the lack of thermocouples or proper flow calorimetry - so easy when the COP
and power output are large.

 

But back to the physical problems:

-The major red flag is that of inconel heating wire temp being necessarily
<1300-1350°C (and realistically probably lower) while thermography is
claiming 1412°C surface temps screams out that there is a massive error in
the calorimetry, rendering the claims of gain meaningless unless or until
that error can be explained satisfactorily.  Hopeful theories about
refractories wires etc just don't stand up to practical considerations
(joining them to inconel that will anyway be melted at joint, forming these
horribly brittle materials, keeping them away from air).

-Knowing that the alumina is translucent also opens up so many possibilities
for errors - and the translucence is unknown and unquantified for the
material used over the range of temperatures and for the range of
wavelengths of emitted light created by hot embedded wires - claims of it
not being a problem don't hold water due to the above demonstrated/known
error in the reactor temperature.  We have no idea how much porosity it has,
how thin it is, or what surface impurities might accumulate during long term
high temperature operation to alter emissivity/translucence etc.

-That I have identified a likely construction for the reactor that gives the
visual results seen during testing (glowing wires wrapped around inner tube,
but with minimal and variable contact quenching bought on by differential
thermal expansion), all encased in outer shell), with no reactor gain only
increases the strength of the gain=0 hypothesis.

 

This could all be fixed easily by Rossi releasing more details of
construction - even photos of cut-open reactor or just doing a proper
independent black box test with good calorimetry.  But as ever he is playing
games due to paranoia, perverseness or worse motives.  He could have made
billions by now and the world would be massively better off if he wasn't
persisting in his school-boy intrigues.

 

On 16 October 2014 12:25, David Roberson <[email protected]> wrote:

Bob, you appear to be too convinced that the gain is unity and are going to
great lengths to obtain that result.  The testers are well respected
scientists and no one should assume that they are so easily misslead.
Besides, there are several measurements that support the fact that the COP
is greater than unity which you seem to brush off.

I wonder about whether or not the actual temperature is correct as well, but
am in no position to prove one way or the other.  The most important
observation that supports the elevated COP is the slope of output power
versus input power that they measure about their chosen operating point.  I
can think of no way to fake that measurement without a dose of true magic.
And then it would be extremely difficult to understand why the measured
behavior tends to follow what my simulation predicts.

Dave 

 

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Robert Lynn <[email protected]>
To: vortex-l <[email protected]>
Sent: Wed, Oct 15, 2014 11:53 pm
Subject: Re: [Vo]:temperature of the resistor wire.

Nullis in verba. :)  I believe my eyes more than others words.  In finding
so many potential faults with so little published information (they had a
month to investigate!!) I can only say that I am unimpressed by the critical
observational skills of the testers.  If they had approached this demo with
a more critical mindset I might be more inclined to believe them.

 

On 16 October 2014 11:41, H Veeder <[email protected]> wrote:

Thanks for posting your ideas.

I hadn't seen that picture of the march 2013 reactor sitting on the scale
with heating coils visible.

 

Why don't we just accept that the authors of the 2014 test also know enough
about the construction of the reactor to say that the dark bands align with
the wires?

Harry

 

 

On Wed, Oct 15, 2014 at 12:21 PM, Alan Fletcher <[email protected]> wrote:

I wrote up my analysis of the "banding" :  (Draft -- I'll rename it later).

 

http://lenr.qumbu.com/rossi_hotcat_oct2014_141014a.php

 

Short answer : we don't even know whether the bright bands line up with the
wires, or the gaps between them.

 

There are multiple explanations, which depend on the structure used to hold
the wires, and on the properties of everything.

 

Insufficient data !!!!!

 

 

 

 

 

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