[Vo]:User contributed video from NIWeek 2012 - Celani's demo

2012-08-09 Thread Akira Shirakawa

Hello group,

Watch this! This is not an official video from NI's Youtube channel:

http://goo.gl/UEuCK


NIWEEK 2012 - LENR - eCAT - Anomalous Heat Effect demonstrated

August 7, 2012 - Austin, Texas - National Instruments NIWEEK 2012 - Francesco shows me the 
Anomalous Heat Effect from what is believed to be a Low Energy Nuclear Reaction (LENR). This is the work of 
the Italian team of Andrea Rossi which I heard about last year, called the eCat (energy catalyzer) at one 
point. This is absolutely fantastic, as the implications of this little understood phenomena are a SEA CHANGE 
to the hope for applications of CLEAN and CHEAP ENERGY. The heat effect is believed to be the same as seen by 
others, such as Fleischmann and Pons in 1989, called Cold Fusion at the time. This is REAL folks, 
and (hopefully) it will change the world. National Instruments CEO Dr. James Truchard made this a part of his 
opening Keynote Presentation at the annual conference called NIWEEK 2012. I am extremely excited 
to see this making progress, and it has the power to change the world as we know it! I will be posting more, 
such as the Panel discussion with Physics !

and Engi
neering luminaries who have witnessed this effect in other situations in the 
past. Read more at http://lenr-canr.org/

Cheers,
S.A.



Re: [Vo]:User contributed video from NIWeek 2012 - Celani's demo

2012-08-09 Thread Robert Lynn
Very nice.

Most interesting 5:50 that power output increased with lower pressure
(about 4bar H2 better than 8bar)

Has anyone managed to find the report that has all of this data in it (saw
page 40 on one of the pages he was talking about)

On 9 August 2012 14:58, Akira Shirakawa shirakawa.ak...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hello group,

 Watch this! This is not an official video from NI's Youtube channel:

 http://goo.gl/UEuCK

  NIWEEK 2012 - LENR - eCAT - Anomalous Heat Effect demonstrated

 August 7, 2012 - Austin, Texas - National Instruments NIWEEK 2012 -
 Francesco shows me the Anomalous Heat Effect from what is believed to be a
 Low Energy Nuclear Reaction (LENR). This is the work of the Italian team of
 Andrea Rossi which I heard about last year, called the eCat (energy
 catalyzer) at one point. This is absolutely fantastic, as the implications
 of this little understood phenomena are a SEA CHANGE to the hope for
 applications of CLEAN and CHEAP ENERGY. The heat effect is believed to be
 the same as seen by others, such as Fleischmann and Pons in 1989, called
 Cold Fusion at the time. This is REAL folks, and (hopefully) it will
 change the world. National Instruments CEO Dr. James Truchard made this a
 part of his opening Keynote Presentation at the annual conference called
 NIWEEK 2012. I am extremely excited to see this making progress, and it
 has the power to change the world as we know it! I will be posting more,
 such as the Panel discussion with Physics !

 and Engi
 neering luminaries who have witnessed this effect in other situations in
 the past. Read more at http://lenr-canr.org/

 Cheers,
 S.A.




Re: [Vo]:User contributed video from NIWeek 2012 - Celani's demo

2012-08-09 Thread Akira Shirakawa

On 2012-08-09 18:55, Robert Lynn wrote:


Most interesting 5:50 that power output increased with lower pressure
(about 4bar H2 better than 8bar)


I wondering it wasn't the decrease in pressure which caused an increase 
in excess heat, but rather the pressure *change* instead?



Has anyone managed to find the report that has all of this data in it
(saw page 40 on one of the pages he was talking about)


I think that will be posted somewhere at a later time by Francesco 
Celani. Maybe after he will (?) present it during ICCF-17.


Cheers,
S.A.



Re: [Vo]:User contributed video from NIWeek 2012 - Celani's demo

2012-08-09 Thread Robert Lynn
On 9 August 2012 18:01, Akira Shirakawa shirakawa.ak...@gmail.com wrote:

 On 2012-08-09 18:55, Robert Lynn wrote:

  Most interesting 5:50 that power output increased with lower pressure
 (about 4bar H2 better than 8bar)


 I wondering it wasn't the decrease in pressure which caused an increase in
 excess heat, but rather the pressure *change* instead?


Good point.

Now that we have seen behind the curtain a little with defkalion, could it
be that one of the advantages that they have in their cyclic system
(operating on about a 6 minute cycle of spark driven excitation followed by
cooling) is that the cyclic change in temperature alters the pressure in
the reactor and thereby causes the active material to breath slightly to
maintain the reaction.