Re: 1997 - 2005 the missing SMOT years

2005-05-10 Thread Grimer
At 02:47 pm 04-05-05 -0400, Grimer wrote: >>Public wrote: >> Have you seen this?: http://www.reidarfinsrud.no/sider/mobile/foto.html >>> >>> >>> Wow. Notice that the magnets are moving at 90d angles from the motion >>> of the ball in each cycle, in the movie clip. Reminds me of th

OT: Stock market churning

2005-05-10 Thread RC Macaulay
Is it my imagination or is there a churning going on with Wall Street. The seesaw is too balanced as if  a giant computer program has control of the game. It fluctuates at near 150 back and forth weekly.   Some opinions have it that IF the Dow drops below 10K there is NO bottom.   Some opinio

Re: Mills_secret_

2005-05-10 Thread Robin van Spaandonk
In reply to Mike Carrell's message of Tue, 10 May 2005 15:43:39 -0400: Hi, [snip] >> Agreed. However this has the disadvantage that O17 may be >> produced, necessitating shielding the reactor because of the >> likely gammas. > >Why should O17 be produced? so far we are dealing with 'hyperchemistry

Re: Mills_secret_

2005-05-10 Thread Robin van Spaandonk
In reply to Mike Carrell's message of Tue, 10 May 2005 15:21:59 -0400: Hi Mike, [snip] The ionization energy of K+++ (to K) is 60.91 eV (not a multiple of 27.2) However the ionization energy of K -> K+ is 82.5 eV (about .9 eV > 81.6 eV) The sum of the ionization energies of K through

Re: The seemingly circuitous behavior of hydrinos

2005-05-10 Thread Robin van Spaandonk
In reply to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>'s message of Tue, 10 May 2005 17:02:40 -0400: Hi Steven, [snip] >It has been theorized that the electron circling the hydrino's proton nucleus >might eventually transform the nucleus into a neutron if there have been a >sufficient number of fractional collapses of

The seemingly circuitous behavior of hydrinos

2005-05-10 Thread orionworks
Lately there has been considerable debate about Dr. Mills hydrinos here in vortex. I think I'll post my hydrino question here before I consider pestering the Hydrino discussion group. Things have been kinda dull over there lately. It has been theorized that the electron circling the hydrino's pr

Re: SMOT

2005-05-10 Thread Stephen A. Lawrence
Stephen A. Lawrence wrote: Hank Scudder wrote: Stephen, I respectfully disagree with your analysis. The rotation of the ball comes from friction with the track as the ball is attracted by the magnet. No friction, the ball would just slide along the track. The magnet doesn't have anything to

SMOT redux

2005-05-10 Thread Jones Beene
T.B.: Hmmm. But, it is the magnetic field which imparts the balls momentum and the ball exits the field retaining that momentum. To make this perpmo short-story longer... and extend it to the limits of credulity (and beyond the 2nd Law), it takes only two letters, and...as is always the situa

Re: SMOT

2005-05-10 Thread Stephen A. Lawrence
Terry Blanton wrote: From: "Hank Scudder" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Stephen, I respectfully disagree with your analysis. The rotation of the ball comes from friction with the track as the ball is attracted by the magnet. No friction, the ball would just slide along the track. The magnet doesn't ha

Re: SMOT

2005-05-10 Thread Stephen A. Lawrence
Hank Scudder wrote: Stephen, I respectfully disagree with your analysis. The rotation of the ball comes from friction with the track as the ball is attracted by the magnet. No friction, the ball would just slide along the track. The magnet doesn't have anything to do with the angular momentu

Re: Re: SMOT

2005-05-10 Thread Terry Blanton
> > From: "Hank Scudder" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > Stephen, > I respectfully disagree with your analysis. The rotation of the ball > comes from friction with the track as the ball is attracted by the magnet. > No friction, the ball would just slide along the track. The magnet doesn't > have

Re: Outsourcing to Pakistan by video

2005-05-10 Thread Steven Krivit
There you go. Yes indeed. Distance is becoming less of a "reality." This story is a good follow up to the one that hit the news a while back, about order-takers at McDonalds being located in call centers in other states. God help the civilized world if the root servers get attacked or malware

Re: SMOT

2005-05-10 Thread Stephen A. Lawrence
Terry Blanton wrote: From: "Stephen A. Lawrence" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> In other words, the Earth itself provides an essentially infinite source/sink for L, which is one reason why it's not always apparent that L is really conserved in real-world situations. Hmmm. But, it is the magnetic

Re: Mills_secret_

2005-05-10 Thread Mike Carrell
Robin wrote: > In reply to Mike Carrell's message of Sun, 8 May 2005 11:01:46 > -0400: > Hi, > [snip] > >3) Identified catalysts include K+, K+++, Rb+, Sr+, He+, Ar+, Ne+, O+++, and > > O+++ is also not a catalyst. O++ however is. Correction noted. Got carried away with K+++ [see related reply

Re: Mills_secret_

2005-05-10 Thread Mike Carrell
Robin wrote: > In reply to Mike Carrell's message of Sun, 8 May 2005 11:01:46 > -0400: > Hi, > [snip] > >2) Isolated hydrogen atoms can be induced to 'shink' to lower states by the proximity of catalyst atom(s) presenting an 'energy hole' of the right value. Energy is transfered by a 'resonant t

Re: Mills_secret_

2005-05-10 Thread Mike Carrell
Robin wrote: > In reply to Mike Carrell's message of Sun, 8 May 2005 11:01:46 > -0400: > Hi, > [snip] > >3) Identified catalysts include K+, K+++, Rb+, Sr+, He+, Ar+, Ne+, O+++, and > > It is K, not K+++ that is the catalyst. K+++ is the end product > after the catalytic action (which then eventu

Re: SMOT

2005-05-10 Thread Hank Scudder
Stephen, I respectfully disagree with your analysis. The rotation of the ball comes from friction with the track as the ball is attracted by the magnet. No friction, the ball would just slide along the track. The magnet doesn't have anything to do with the angular momentum directly. Hank ---

Re: Re: SMOT

2005-05-10 Thread Terry Blanton
> > From: "Stephen A. Lawrence" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > In other words, the Earth itself provides > an essentially infinite source/sink for L, which is one reason why it's > not always apparent that L is really conserved in real-world situations. Hmmm. But, it is the magnetic field which impar

Re: Japan backs off??

2005-05-10 Thread Jed Rothwell
Mike Carrell wrote: I see an attack of good sense. Japan can get work on the project without incurring the larger cost. The project is likely to be a bust, along with the rest of the hot fusion projects of the last decades. Cost is probably an issue. The Japanese government is broke. Very broke. M

Re: SMOT

2005-05-10 Thread Stephen A. Lawrence
Terry Blanton wrote: From: "Stephen A. Lawrence" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> If you don't understand this then you need to brush up on your physics. Let's talk about the physics. A magnetic gradient pulls the ball up a ramp. Suddenly there's a hole in the ramp and gravity pulls the ball throug

Re: Re: SMOT

2005-05-10 Thread Terry Blanton
> > From: "Stephen A. Lawrence" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > If you don't understand this then you need to brush up on your physics. Let's talk about the physics. A magnetic gradient pulls the ball up a ramp. Suddenly there's a hole in the ramp and gravity pulls the ball through the hole. The bal

Re: OT : Asphalt Shingle Color Choices?

2005-05-10 Thread Frederick Sparber
We're locked in on the contractor and price for the shingle re-roof.   Frederick     - Original Message - From: Jones Beene To: vortex-l Sent: 5/10/05 10:23:50 AM Subject: Re: OT : Asphalt Shingle Color Choices? Fred,   "The existing (11 year old roof shingle is a gray) and the att

Re: Asphalt Shingle Color Choices?

2005-05-10 Thread Frederick Sparber
> [Original Message] Terry wrote: > > Lighter is better except that you must pay for the fungus inhibitors if you > have any foliage nearby. My shingles are a light cinnamon. > Fungus might not be a problem here in the arid Southwest but my daughter noted that the few white roofs in the area h

Re: SMOT

2005-05-10 Thread Stephen A. Lawrence
John Steck wrote: I disagree. Your zeal is not letting you think clearly. You misunderstand. It's my knowledge of physics which causes me to see Greg's claims for what they are, not my "zeal". He needs gravity to break the flux field and drop the ball. Bosh. Two conservative fields => energy

Re: OT : Asphalt Shingle Color Choices?

2005-05-10 Thread Jones Beene
Fred,   "The existing (11 year old roof shingle is a gray) and the attic is a blazing inferno by10:00 AM."   My former neighbor coated his old shingles with this product (see the A-10) http://www.protek-ca.com/product_info/product_line_overview.html   Expensive but cheaper than new shingles..

Re: Asphalt Shingle Color Choices?

2005-05-10 Thread Terry Blanton
> > From: "Frederick Sparber" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Help!! Lighter is better except that you must pay for the fungus inhibitors if you have any foliage nearby. My shingles are a light cinnamon. The real secret is to keep that roof turbine running. The captive heat actually reduces the life o

Re: Asphalt Shingle Color Choices?

2005-05-10 Thread Frederick Sparber
The LBL calculated Temperature Rise & SRI value:   http://eetd.lbl.gov/coolroof/ref_01.htm   "Temperature Rise Formula for estimation of maximum roof temperature rise. We have used simple, basic heat transfer equations to estimate peak roof temperatures, based on the assumptions listed below.

Outsourcing to Pakistan by video

2005-05-10 Thread Jed Rothwell
Here is an article about the ultimate form of outsourcing and video telecommuting. I described this sort of thing briefly in chapter 17 of my book. This is what the world is coming to. See: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/09/AR2005050901158.html QUOTES: "Virtual Secr

Re: Asphalt Shingle Color Choices?

2005-05-10 Thread Frederick Sparber
Last October a freak hail storm severely damaged many asphalt roofs in this area of Albuquerque. The insurance companies are picking up the tab for total re-roofing.   My first choice was a "white" shingle to cut down on summer cooling costs, but I was out-voted by the lady folk, whom prefer som

Re: The SMOT game over, Greg Watson gone

2005-05-10 Thread Taylor J. Smith
Stephen A. Lawrence wrote: > > So I'd say that as a character, Greg is extremely plausible, even if his > story isn't. > > (Let this be a lesson to everyone involved in the free-energy field...) Hi All, I never got my money back; but I am still not convinced that Greg was a lying con artist.

Re: Japan backs off??

2005-05-10 Thread Mike Carrell
BlankRichard wrote: Do I see the ultimate intimidation story emerging or is it simple politics doing what it does best. I can't imagine Japan letting this go http://www.planetark.com/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/30695/story.htm#top Richard --- I see an attack of good sense. Japa

Re: Airport Security & Stargate

2005-05-10 Thread Frederick Sparber
Would you end up in a tortilla factory in Atlanta, or possibly an out-sourced computer factory in India if those metal detector Hellhole Coil  airport "security portals" were round instead of rectangular?   Frederick