Jed Rothwell wrote:
Wesley Bruce wrote:
More closely resembling the treatment that creationists get in
science. I have creationist friends, PhD's, that have done a large
(170+) sample single blind test on radiometric dating and it Failed
completely.
I know nothing about these instruments,
Jones
Gave me a chuckle and if the problem were not so serious I may even smile.
Back when our children were in grade school, the local schools integrated in
the 1960's, I caught flack from commenting " you people believe
integration will lift them up , I have news for you, they will drag you
It is plausible that if more heat energy is injected into the global weather
system, all phemomena can go to higher extremes. The paths and magnitudes of
individual storms are not predictable by any means available to us, so the
hit on New Orleans could be predicted only tens of hours in advance. I
Mitchell Swartz wrote:
At 04:13 PM 9/16/2005, Edmund Storms <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Now people exist on a spectrum
from true believer to pathological sceptic to
form a voting quorum. The most rewarding ones are those who were dead
against you but change. Now how
On a lighter note... The LENR web site, as translated into
"Ebonics":
Dis site features some library uh sheets on LENR, Low Energy
Nuclar Reacshuns, also knode as Col' Fusion. 'S coo', bro. (CANR,
Chemically Assisted Nuclear Reacshuns, be anoda' term fo' dis
phenomenon. 'S coo', bro.) It feat
At 03:11 PM 9/16/2005, Jed Rothwell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
William Beaty wrote:
> are many commercial uses for a 10 to 100 Watt device. Even a 10 W heater
> would be useful for some niche applications, such as keeping equipment
warm
> in the Arctic.
How about milliwatts and microwatts. I
At 04:13 PM 9/16/2005, Edmund Storms <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Now people exist on a spectrum from
true believer to pathological sceptic to
form a voting quorum. The most rewarding ones are those who were dead
against you but change. Now how are you going to bring the
Laughter will save the rest of us from going insane.
Thanks Jed
At 02:52 PM 9/16/2005, you wrote:
"Woman complains to cops after hitman she hired fails to get the job done"
See:
http://mdn.mainichi-msn.co.jp/national/news/20050915p2a00m0na003000c.html
"A woman who hired a hitman to murder th
"Woman complains to cops after hitman she hired fails to get the job done"
See:
http://mdn.mainichi-msn.co.jp/national/news/20050915p2a00m0na003000c.html
"A woman who hired a hitman to murder the wife of her lover, and then
complained to police when he didn't do the job, has been arrested alon
Jones wrote:
(Infected with the pox were)
> Christopher Columbus, Ludwig van Beethoven,
> Robert Schumann, Franz Schubert, Flaubert,
> Charles Baudelaire, Guy de Maupassant, Abraham
> Lincoln, Vincent van Gogh, Friedrich Nietzsche,
> Oscar Wilde, James Joyce, Adolf Hitler and
> Isak Dinesen.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
To me, until you have regular repeatable experiments (properly peered
reviewed) . . .
We had than by 1990.
. . . and some putative mechanism . . .
That we do not have.
, how can you be demanding Manhattan
Project style funding or $15million+ that Jed seems to t
this one is said to make the engine purr
http://www.wusatv.com/news/news_article.aspx?storyid=42960
-alex
_
Express yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! Download today - it's FREE!
http://messenger.msn.click-url.com/go/onm002004
On Fri, 16 Sep 2005, Jed Rothwell wrote:
> "SYDNEY (Reuters) - An Australian man built up a 40,000-volt charge of
> static electricity in his clothes as he walked, leaving a trail of scorched
> carpet and molten plastic and forcing firefighters to evacuate a building.
> . . ."
>
> I vote joke.
Or
> [Original Message]
From: What's New <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: 9/16/2005 12:41:55 PM
Subject: [BOBPARKS-WHATSNEW] What's New Friday September 16, 2005
WHAT'S NEW Robert L. Park Friday, 16 Sep 05 Washington, DC
Congress shall make no law respecting an est
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Ed wrote:
How do you get some charged moiety over the 10MeV or so barrier to even
get
near the nuclear forces (approx fm scale) and get substantial yield?
Let's
say you have some yield for hot fusion then this would get multiplied by
two
very small factors: a Maxwel
Straight out of SciFi and Hollywood ... is there anything worse
than a parasite which can silently infect us - and then actually
take control of the human mind?
But what if... good-new/bad-news in some cases this mind
control parasite (not unlike a performance-enhancing drug)
actually mak
Reporter Greg Smith:
http://www.norwichbulletin.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050916/NEWS01/509160322/1002
Either that, or a joke. See:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20050916/od_nm/australia_electricity_dc;_ylt=AnSncsPmBadIcUXBllHNhE.s0NUE;_ylu=X3oDMTA3ODdxdHBhBHNlYwM5NjQ
"SYDNEY (Reuters) - An Australian man built up a 40,000-volt charge of
static electricity in his clothes as he walked, leav
Hi Jeff,
John Schnurer would have agreed with you. And if he's reading this I am sure
he does agree. Although he could be pesky at times with cryptic comments, I
understood exactly why it used to drive him so crazy that almost *all*
Lifter experimenters would theorize that there was [probably
William Beaty wrote:
> are many commercial uses for a 10 to 100 Watt device. Even a 10 W heater
> would be useful for some niche applications, such as keeping equipment warm
> in the Arctic.
How about milliwatts and microwatts. Isn't
Eveready/Duracell/Rayovac/Panasonic
a billion-dollar indus
>Beaty Sez:
...
> "pyrophoric" iron. If iron is ground up fine enough,
> it's surface area is such that the high rate corrosion
> heat can cause fires.
>
> They sell these in Bartell's pharmacy. Self-heating pain
> releif pads. If you cut open the tyvek pad, you find
> black powder which even
revtec wrote:
We are incredibly vunerable to any variation in output that our sun may
shine on us. Compared to a 1% or 2% shift in solar radiation, anything
civilization can do is inconsequential.
Suppose we manage to act effectively to reduce global warming, and then the
sun goes into a low o
I downloaded and read the DeNinno paper, Jones.
They used no mass spectrometer sensitive enough to discern between D2+ and
He4+ let alone a 0.6 percent mass difference between a light and heavy
deuteron or helium/tritium atom.
Hence not good enough to separate and concentrate them, from parts per
- Original Message -
From: "Jed Rothwell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Friday, September 16, 2005 12:06 PM
Subject: RE: Some experts believe global warming is causing stronger
hurricanes
> It is NEVER too late. If we -- mankind as a whole -- gets serious about
> this, we can devise wa
Frederick Sparber writes,
"At the risk of being drawn and quartered I calculate that the
Helium (or Tritium) produced by fusion of two "defective"
Deuterons will have a mass about 0.6% greater than the 4.00260 AMU
of regular Helium or the 3.01605 AMU of Tritium or 3.01602 AMU
He3. Thus the e
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Jed in a nutshell, Carl Sagan: "Extraordinary claims, extraordinary
evidence".
Carl Sagan was right about many thing. Yesterday I learned that he said
some nice things about cold fusion toward the end of his life. But that
statement was wrong, wrong, wrong. He had it
From: Wesley Bruce
http://www.gasresources.net/Plagiarism(Overview).htm
Dead link above. Do you have an alternative? Is it a typo?
it's not really dead, just ill -- for some reason many mailers don't
recognize the parenthetic portion
if you will cut and paste it into your url address
Jed Rothwell wrote:
Researchers at Georgia Tech (rah, rah!) believe that global warming is
causing stronger hurricanes. See:
http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn8002
Other articles have pointed out that other factors are at work, such
as a natural 20-year cycle, but these factors are
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
You've got a temper and this is your particular fuse.
I do have a temper (although it seldom lasts more than five minutes), but
in this case I think your comments were hilarious. I am tickled that anyone
thinks I am "authoritarian and patrician." I show wave that at
Michael Foster wrote:
> The problem is, by the time the debate
> is fully settled it may be too late
> to do stave off a catastrophe. We must
> act on the basis of incomplete and
> unsure information.
But Jed, isn't that exact logic W used
to invade Iraq?
Exactly! I agree there is a risk of m
You've got a temper and this is your particular fuse.
Sorry.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>Very authoritarian and patrician.
You got a problem with that?
Specifically, apart from the fact that you do not like my attitude, do you
have any substantive technical objections to the points I raised in
Last one before I go...
Yes Mitchell but you've got to get that stuff in Phys Rev. A(?), B(?) or D.
That's how you'll attract the young research fellows skilled in that arena.
You've got to stop preaching to a flock of one or the converted.
R.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [
On Thu, 15 Sep 2005, Jed Rothwell wrote:
> http://www.scienceiq.com/ShowFact.cfm?ID=212
>
> http://www.sportstek.net/hotteeze.htm
>
> Apparently you have to admit air into the bag. It would be interesting to
> see what would happen if a whole box of these things was damaged.
>
> I have not seen th
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Very authoritarian and patrician.
You got a problem with that?
Specifically, apart from the fact that you do not like my attitude, do you
have any substantive technical objections to the points I raised in the
debate? Because, frankly, I do not give a hoot about you
Jeff and Dorothy Kooistra wrote:
> I asked:
>
>>> What is unconventional about the two "plate" components of a charged
>>> capacitor
>>> being attracted to each other?
>
> Harry Reeder replied:
>
>> The force of attraction is apparently not equal and opposite.
>> If the force were equal and opp
At 11:53 AM 9/16/2005, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
You have to show that unlike other nuclear processes occurring in lattices
(say fission) that there is a preference to giving up the energy as phonons
at a certain frequency rather than photons. This might be possible if there
is a resonance effect
Alex Caliostro wrote:
From: Wesley Bruce
We have another problem with shallow oil. Bacteria feeding on the
fossil fuels can transport and add new carbon 14 to the other wise
old oil.
oh, yes - there is even one theory that bacteria could be involved in
the creation of oil
It's int
Jed in a nutshell, Carl Sagan: "Extraordinary claims, extraordinary
evidence".
I've got to go and may join in tomorrow. I just want to go out, eat, watch a
film and spy on the ladies.
Remi.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Jed Rothwell
Sent
At the risk of being drawn and quartered I calculate that the Helium (or Tritium) produced
by fusion of two "defective" Deuterons will have a mass about 0.6% greater than
the 4.00260 AMU of regular Helium or the 3.01605 AMU of Tritium or 3.01602 AMU He3. Thus the expected energy release (based o
On Thu, 15 Sep 2005, Jed Rothwell wrote:
> By the way, many fringe inventors have the impression that a device must
> produce thousands of Watts before it is practical. This is incorrect. There
> are many commercial uses for a 10 to 100 Watt device. Even a 10 W heater
> would be useful for some ni
Cheers Dr Swartz but:-
> As a result, success is still affected by chance. However, if the
> variables should combine to produce success, the sample is found to be
> 100% reproducible.
Came from somebody else's post not mine.
As regards to Steven I guess the difference between an Edison and
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yes! Jed said the same as regards to his background in biology and his
dismissal of Creationism - if you can't design an experiment to test the
conjecture/hypothesis, you can't move things along.
There are many observational sciences, such as astronomy, in which
exper
Jed wrote:
> The problem is, by the time the debate
> is fully settled it may be too late
> to do stave off a catastrophe. We must
> act on the basis of incomplete and
> unsure information.
But Jed, isn't that exact logic W used
to invade Iraq? (The devil made me write
this. I have no control
>Remi sez:
>
> Steven,
> Yes but the super-conduction people were able to make
> substantial progress with minimal theory.
What's your point? It's still the same issue. The only difference is that those
working in superconductivity have had an easier time of being able to reproduce
a phenomeno
At 10:25 AM 9/16/2005, Ed Storms wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dear Vo and CF'ers,
I tried to unsubscribe but sent it to the wrong address. Anyway, since I'm
here I have a naive question for CF'ers:
Let's not insult your integrity and the fact that you are saying that nearly
100% of your expe
Speaking of pocket warmers, I once made something similar accidentally.
While I was siting in front of the computer, an AA battery and coins in my
trouser pocket arranged themselves into an electric circuit with sensible
ohmic resistance. ;-)
Harry
Alex Caliostro wrote:
The problem is, by the time the debate is fully settled it may be too
late to do stave off a catastrophe.
it is already too late
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/science_technology/article312997.ece
It is NEVER too late. If we -- mankind as a whole -- gets serious a
Very authoritarian and patrician.
You know the fable about the contest between the sun and the wind to see if
they could get a man to remove his coat?
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Jed Rothwell
Sent: 16 September 2005 16:53
To: vortex-L@
Yes! Yed said the same as regards to his background in biology and his
dismissal of Creationism - if you can't design an experiment to test the
conjecture/hypothesis, you can't move things along.
Foisted on his own petard?
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECT
You have to show that unlike other nuclear processes occurring in lattices
(say fission) that there is a preference to giving up the energy as phonons
at a certain frequency rather than photons. This might be possible if there
is a resonance effect.
By this resonance effect, talk of the M-B distri
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> The problem is, by the time the debate is fully settled it may be too late
> to do stave off a catastrophe. We must act on the basis of incomplete and
> unsure information.
And on the flip side, look what world recessions do - 1929-1945.
Tax this, tax that, limit th
I was amused to note that journalist and self-appointed atmospheric expert
researcher Charles Krauthammer dismissed the very idea of that global
warming may have contributed to the ferocity of the Katrina hurricane. I
would like to ask him what he based to that claim on, and how many papers
in
From: Jed Rothwell
The problem is, by the time the debate is fully settled it may be too late
to do stave off a catastrophe.
it is already too late
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/science_technology/article312997.ece
-alex
___
Steven,
Yes but the super-conduction people were able to make substantial progress
with minimal theory.
It might be me, but if I have an inkling of what is going on I can design
experiments. Very much a method person me.
Remi.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROT
I asked:
>> What is unconventional about the two "plate" components of a charged
>> capacitor
>> being attracted to each other?
Harry Reeder replied:
>The force of attraction is apparently not equal and opposite.
>If the force were equal and opposite it would not lift off the ground.
Naudin i
Ed wrote:
>Obviously, a mechanism exists that is not part of normal experience.
>That is why the effect is so hard to produce and requires a novel
>environment. People need to change their expectations and explore novel
>processes that only occur in a crystalline structure.
OK so if you have
Remi sez:
...
> How are you going to whet peoples appetite with papers and
> graphs but no theory to match it to, it's all hearsay and
> trust?
It is my understanding that nobody has yet come up with a definitive theory to
explain how superconductivity works.
That hasn't stopped a plethora
> The problem is, by the time the debate is fully settled it may be too late
> to do stave off a catastrophe. We must act on the basis of incomplete and
> unsure information.
> - Jed
And on the flip side, look what world recessions do - 1929-1945.
Tax this, tax that, limit this limit that, l
Could this be proof that Velikovsky was right after all? Wouldn't a close
encounter with earth leave the same foot print? It seems clear that Mars
once had an atmosphere and water. With Earth being much more massive than
Mars, wouldn't the Earth draw off the atmosphere and perhaps most of the
wa
Ed wrote:
>>
>> How do you get some charged moiety over the 10MeV or so barrier to even
>> get
>> near the nuclear forces (approx fm scale) and get substantial yield?
>> Let's
>> say you have some yield for hot fusion then this would get multiplied by
>> two
>> very small factors: a Maxwell-Boltz
Do those clever folks at eBay know something we don't?
I noticed this ad when looking over the Vort posts on
mail-archive.com.
Discount Fusion
Reactors
New & used Fusion
Reactors. aff Check out
the huge selection now!
www.eBay.com
Naturally, I clicked on the link to see what would come
up, bu
Researchers at Georgia Tech (rah, rah!) believe that global warming is
causing stronger hurricanes. See:
http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn8002
Other articles have pointed out that other factors are at work, such as a
natural 20-year cycle, but these factors are reportedly not suffic
This is pretty good. I suggest a few adjustments:
There is no experimental evidence that fissile radioneuclides can be
produced by low energy nuclear reactions.
There is spotty experimental evidence that fissile radioneuclides can be
produced by LENR [Wolf, Dash], but this work has not been
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dear Vo and CF'ers,
I tried to unsubscribe but sent it to the wrong address. Anyway, since I'm
here I have a naive question for CF'ers:
Let's not insult your integrity and the fact that you are saying that nearly
100% of your experiments are reproducible despite unbia
http://www.norwichbulletin.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050916/NEWS01/509160322/1002
http://tinyurl.com/7j2se
Regards,
Steven Vincent Johnson
www.OrionWorks.com
brazil imported 85% of its energy in 1978, 10% in 2002, and expects to be
nearly self sufficient next year
http://www.energybulletin.net/5021.html
here it seems like the us govt tries to make it more difficult to use other
fuel
http://www.eere.energy.gov/afdc/afv/conversion.html
i think we
Beaty sez:
...
> Imagine the event! An entire moon hits the atmosphere and
> breaks up into two or three huge chunks plus lots of rubble,
> into a hundred asteroids, which then roll across the land at
> orbital velocity from horizon to horizon like incandescent
> bowling balls the size of Manha
From: Wesley Bruce
We have another problem with shallow oil. Bacteria feeding on the fossil
fuels can transport and add new carbon 14 to the other wise old oil.
oh, yes - there is even one theory that bacteria could be involved in the
creation of oil
It's interesting that the linked re
Vo,
I've seen to have jumped back in and Fred was already at it.
So you are looking for a non conventional nuclear mechanism. You need
theory. Why won't the establishment entertain what CF theorists put forward?
Is it this stuff really a step too far? I'm sure matter is more stable than
you're mak
Dear Vo and CF'ers,
I tried to unsubscribe but sent it to the wrong address. Anyway, since I'm
here I have a naive question for CF'ers:
Let's not insult your integrity and the fact that you are saying that nearly
100% of your experiments are reproducible despite unbiased researchers
having difficu
In order to account for low energy stripping of deuterons (as low as a few eV) either
there is an approximately 0.1% mass difference between the "normal" 2.0141 AMU deuteron
that requires 2.23 MeV to separate the neutron, or the neutron might
contain the Positronium anion (Electronium). Either
thomas malloy wrote:
Having read what was posted, I've decided to write a synopsis. I am
submitting this to the list for comment.
Access to heavy water has been made more difficult, however if you can
demonstrate that you are a legitimate scientist, you can procure it.
There is no experimen
Alex Caliostro wrote:
my friend is a CE who claims most oil is not from dead dinosaurs
he says this paper
http://gasresources.net/AlkaneGenesis.htm
proves it - here is a quote from the abstract
demonstrated using only the solid reagents solid iron oxide, FeO, and
marble, CaCO3, 99.9% pure,
Having read what was posted, I've decided to write a synopsis. I am
submitting this to the list for comment.
Access to heavy water has been made more difficult, however if you
can demonstrate that you are a legitimate scientist, you can procure
it.
There is no experimental evidence that fiss
I've decided to synopsize cold electricity.
I concluded that if the cold electricity can be replicated, it would
be a tool to cohere the vacuum. For this reason and that
investigators have witnessed the phenomena, I've decided to continue
my attempts to discuss it. This phenomena is outside of
OrionWorks wrote:
Jed sez:
...
I mean hand warmers. "Disposable chemical pocket warmers." Little plastic
bags full of chemicals, mostly iron filings, I think. You smoosh or bend
the bag to mix the chemicals, and it gets hot for several hours. I guess it
puts out a couple of watts. I
Harry Veeder wrote:
Evidence that lifters follow unconventional physics:
http://jlnlabs.imars.com/lifters/vacuum/index.htm
Harry
That's convincing! We need to get a power source that will power the
thing. Counting the power source & transformers into the payload
capacity is the chalenge.
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