If Rossi has a problem with harmonics and or reactive power, he has better
to rethink his electrical circuit. Nowadays, rectifying AC to DC and then
again hash it to make AC is common circuits. The harmonics and the reactive
power can easily be managed, if the main circuit is designed right. As we
say in French,’Il met un emplâtre sur une jambe de bois’. He is using 30
years old solutions for a bad designed circuit.

 

In the Lugano report page 5, there are 3 coils inside the eCat. At one time,
one and only one coil is on while the 2 others are off. It is not possible
to have 2 on and 1 off. So I don’t understand the speculation. Alain, could
you explain more?

 

  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Alain Sepeda
Sent: lundi 3 novembre 2014 22:51
To: Vortex List
Subject: Re: [Vo]: New Rossi lab photo has much information

 

an idea to check from the surprising claim in the report that one of the
wire effective current was abo the sum of the (equals) two others...

after some rethinking, this imply all current are synchronous...

this is a monophase devices, with simply 2 coils...

what for ? only speculation that it may just make some thermal oscillations
from left to right, or center to extremities, or else stabilize center and
extremities...

anyway the two currents are quite similar...

 

note that this monophase current maybe the result of a triphase dimmer,
switching various phases to reduce deforming power and increase frequency
(to help filtering, and phase balance, when used by 3)...

 

what looks as complexity is simply classical electric power  engineering...

 

for the 100-200kWe used by the 1MWth power plant, this may be a hell to
control phase and harmonics and reduce deforming and reactive power...
electric companies bill you for that, and can even ban you if you inject
that mess in the grid.

 

2014-11-03 19:10 GMT+01:00 Arnaud Kodeck <[email protected]>:

Bob,

 

Nice analysis. The eCats are configured in star or triangle. I think from
what analysed is that it is a star with a free neutral.

 

This could be also disinformation. This configuration might have never
worked at all and be published one year later to lead the replicator in the
wrong direction.

 

Arnaud

  _____  

From: Bob Higgins [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: lundi 3 novembre 2014 15:49
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Vo]: New Rossi lab photo has much information

 

Bob Greenyer of MFMP just posted this image of Rossi's lab with 3 hotCats
being tested and I put it on my Google drive:

 

 
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B5Pc25a4cOM2U3FIWmpCMnlZaFE/view?usp=sharin
g

 

A wealth of information can be gleaned from this:

*         Rossi is testing 3 hotCats simultaneously.

*         Each hotCat is connected with 2-wires only - Each IS CONNECTED
SINGLE PHASE! This probably means that the hotCat only relies on heat-up,
not magnetic field interaction - certainly not rotating field interaction.

*         The gray box has 3 thermocouple connections with one going to each
hotCat

*         The gray box controller is controlling the energy to all 3 hotCats
via the red 3-phase SCR controller in such a way as to control the
temperature of each hotCat independently.

*         This gray box controller is designed to control each hotCat solely
based on 1 temperature measurement per hotCat.  The temperature controllers
mounted on the gray box are probably each controlling the setpoint of each
hotCat (I.E. they are not being used just as temperature meters).  A
microcontroller in the gray box may read each meter (RS232) and then sets
the SCR angle for that phase to control the power to each hotCat.  

*         The red SCR box may be configured for delta SCR configuration for
easy control of the individual hotCats, in which case a microprocessor would
not be needed.  Each of the little PID temperature controller panel meters
could directly control the corresponding SCR in the delta phase
configuration.  Even if the red box had y-configured SCRs, they probably
could be controlled with the panel temperature controllers with simple
logic.

*         Replication need not use a 3-phase heater coil inside the hotCat
because there is no need to simulate an industrial environment.  Replication
just got easier.  Basically each hotCat is just a small temperature
regulated mini-tube furnace.  It would be possible to design the replica to
operate on ordinary US 120VAC, even with a 15A outlet using a triac dimmer
with an inexpensive PID temperature controller from eBay.

Bob Higgins

 

 

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