Re: Home on LeGrange

2005-07-15 Thread thomas malloy
I wrote, and From: Terry Blanton Bin Laden, according to Williams, has nearly unlimited funds to spend on his nuclear terrorism plan because he has remained in control of the Blood Money! some might protest. Perhaps so... Never the less, tell that to hoards of radiation victims

Re: The Casimir Heat-Pump

2005-07-15 Thread Frederick Sparber
Jones Beene wrote: Since orthohydrogen molecules make up 75% of "normal" hydrogen at room temperature, this can considerably complicate the job of such tasks as storing liquid hydrogen, should that be your goal. If you convert them catalytically to parahydrogen they will give up a small

Re: 6 Cylinder Casimir Engine

2005-07-15 Thread Frederick Sparber
Going bythis, an engine comprising a crankshaft with six "throws" 60 degrees apart, and a flywheel hooked by connecting rods to six ) thermally insulatedcylinders pre pressurized with H2(or other gases?) at pressures corresponding to their cycle position (then cranked over manually) should run

Re: 6 Cylinder Casimir Engine

2005-07-15 Thread Frederick Sparber
The Bellofram Rolling Diaphragm makes for a good piston. This 36 page pdf with lots of pictures gives the scoop on them. http://www.marshbellofram.com/pdfs/design_manual.pdf http://www.marshbellofram.com/diaphragm.htm Temperature ranges from -120F to 600F Fabrics for pressures up to

Pharmaceuticals

2005-07-15 Thread RC Macaulay
John.Rudiger wrote on the home on LaGrange thread... Australia was the last country in the "Western World" to ban the use ofHeroine as a prescription pain killer. Medical Practitioners to this datestill claim that heroine is one of the best drugs available (better and withless side effects

Re: Rolamite

2005-07-15 Thread Frederick Sparber
Don Wilkes came up with this while I was at Sandia Labs. Looks a lot like the leakporoof virtually frictionless Bellofram Rolling Diaphram. Big writeup in the Wall Street Journal too. http://www.rexresearch.com/wilkes/1wilkes.htm Frederick

RE: Home on LeGrange

2005-07-15 Thread orionworks
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ... Australia was the last country in the Western World to ban the use of Heroine as a prescription pain killer. Medical Practitioners to this date still claim that heroine is one of the best drugs available (better and withless side effects than morphine) for

Re: Home on LeGrange

2005-07-15 Thread orionworks
From: thomas malloy ... Having witnessed first hand the deleterious effects of mind altering drugs, I understand why society felt compelled to ban them. OTOH, the effects of prohibition have been at least as bad. As for Al Queda's nukes, that's our petro dollars at work. For once we

Re: Hydrogen ICE Hybrids

2005-07-15 Thread Noel D. Whitney
I had to query that one myself Terry - Its 1 bar or Athmosphere - Rgds Noel whitney - Original Message - From: Terry Blanton [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: vortex-l@eskimo.com Sent: Wednesday, July 13, 2005 6:22 PM Subject: Re: Hydrogen ICE Hybrids From: John Harris Have a look at

Allergies are apparently caused by too much cleanliness

2005-07-15 Thread Jed Rothwell
RC Macaulay wrote: Enter now the allergy type drugs. Few had allergies three generations ago. Now it is common for a test at the doctors to show that of 100 base allergens, a person may be allergic to more than 50. Hmmm! That is a very interesting development. The latest research indicates

Re: Pharmaceuticals

2005-07-15 Thread Steven Krivit
What we need is a scantily clad girl waering a Harley shirt draped across the hood of a CF drag racer. Ya gotta sell the sizzles if ya wanta make a buck!! Richard Hey Richard, if you can find the CF drag racer, I'll get the girl (and the shirt too!)

Re: Allergies are apparently caused by too much cleanliness

2005-07-15 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To Jed- I was raised on the farm-with cattle- pigs-chickens-dogs and cats. I have all kinds of Allergies.- George S.

Re: Allergies are apparently caused by too much cleanliness

2005-07-15 Thread Jed Rothwell
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: To Jed- I was raised on the farm-with cattle- pigs-chickens-dogs and cats. I have all kinds of Allergies.- George S. The Swiss study did find some rural children with allergies. I was not suggesting there is perfect correlation and -- therefore -- obvious

I Sing the Sun Electric - Part II

2005-07-15 Thread Terry Blanton
Unlike me, this guy is no crackpot and others seem to be taking him seriously: http://www.thesurfaceofthesun.com/index.html? Excerpting from: http://www.thesurfaceofthesun.com/model.htm? The reason for this is simple. The SOHO, TRACE and YOHKOH satellites demonstrate that the sun is not

Re: Allergies are apparently caused by too much cleanliness

2005-07-15 Thread Frederick Sparber
I grew up on a farm in the 30 and 40s with exposure similar to what George S. describes, without any noticeable allergies. Doctor visits were about twice in 17 years (once with pneumonia, and once with a broken finger). The food supply wasn't adulterated with preservatives, MSG and pesticides

Re: I Sing the Sun Electric - Part II

2005-07-15 Thread Grimer
At 01:49 pm 15/07/2005 -0400, you wrote: Unlike me, this guy is no crackpot and others seem to be taking him seriously: http://www.thesurfaceofthesun.com/index.html? Excerpting from: http://www.thesurfaceofthesun.com/model.htm? The reason for this is simple. The SOHO, TRACE and YOHKOH

Re: I Sing the Sun Electric - Part II

2005-07-15 Thread Stephen A. Lawrence
Terry Blanton wrote: Unlike me, this guy is no crackpot He believes the sun is solid (of course, since he feels it has a solid surface), and less obviously, some of his comments seem to indicate he may believe the energy comes from fission: One of the most basic processes of the sun is

Re: I Sing the Sun Electric - Part II

2005-07-15 Thread Terry Blanton
From: Stephen A. Lawrence On the model page he mentions fusion only in the context of what he feels is the mistaken view that the sun is a big ball of gas (or plasma, rather). If you download his paper you see that he believes the inner core fuses hydrogen. I think he misspoke

Thought for the day from Bertrand Russell

2005-07-15 Thread Jed Rothwell
[It is a little difficult to say whether this is optimistic or pessimistic. But in any case I think it does represent a point of view shared by most scientists, and I wish they would stand up for these ideals more often, even though it has become unfashionable. - JR] Neither misery nor folly

Re: I Sing the Sun Electric - Part II

2005-07-15 Thread Stephen A. Lawrence
Terry Blanton wrote: From: Stephen A. Lawrence On the model page he mentions fusion only in the context of what he feels is the mistaken view that the sun is a big ball of gas (or plasma, rather). If you download his paper you see that he believes the inner core fuses

Printed in Khaleej Times, United Arab Emirates, 6 July 2005

2005-07-15 Thread Steve Krivit
Hot fusion a mirage! A FEW corrections to your editorial are in order. First, this is not the ‘first step’. This is one of the many steps in an ongoing commercial research endeavor. Since 1951, dozens of government and academic laboratories around the world have built experimental tokamak