Michel wrote..
70 mpg, impressive!
Howdy,
But that is for a hybrid , correct???
VW has a diesel introducing to the US market in 2008 with a reported 65
mpg. If it's all the same to you I will take the VW diesel over any
hybrid..
Richard
I made some mistakes in that last post. Sorry!
I wrote: "The concepts you are applying are idealized. They don't
apply to reality without limits. Given to *real* bodies B1 and B2 at
potentials p1 and p2, each having N atoms, the field E at some point
P between them can not be maintained r
On Aug 10, 2007, at 12:33 PM, Michel Jullian wrote:
Sorry Horace, my previous reply was typed in a hurry. I meant that
only differences of potential matter, regardless of the system or
device considered, for the reasons 1 to 4 that I'll detail further:
1/ The motions and equilibriums of c
I confess I am a Newtonian person mostly ignorant of QM, but there is one thing
I know, only differences of potential matter, whether the device under scrutiny
involves QM pecularities or not (devices such as field effect transistors do I
imagine). Maybe a good soul here will confirm this, for m
70 mpg, impressive!
Google Calculator is more and more impressive too, try searching (without the
quotes):
<70 mpg>
answer: "70 miles per gallon = 29.7600594 kilometers per liter"
Pretty good :) Now try harder:
<70 mpg in liters per 100 km>
answer: "70 miles per gallon = 3.36020835 liters per
On Aug 10, 2007, at 12:33 PM, Michel Jullian wrote:
Sorry Horace, my previous reply was typed in a hurry. I meant that
only differences of potential matter, regardless of the system or
device considered, for the reasons 1 to 4 that I'll detail further:
1/ The motions and equilibriums of c
Sorry Horace, my previous reply was typed in a hurry. I meant that only
differences of potential matter, regardless of the system or device considered,
for the reasons 1 to 4 that I'll detail further:
>> 1/ The motions and equilibriums of charges are determined by forces
a=F/m
>> 2/ Forces are
On Aug 10, 2007, at 10:57 AM, Jones Beene wrote:
Hey this is confusing since I do not understand the context, but
there are some decent COP numbers and more evidence of an anomaly
with Al foil - was it all calorimetry error?
I really don't know. It is fairly certain some of it was error.
Here is an article in Japanese:
http://www.mainichi-msn.co.jp/keizai/kigyou/news/20070811km020076000c.html
Rough translation by me --
Toyota: Prius Meets National "2015 Fuel Efficiency Standard"
Toyota announced on August 10 that the electric-engine hybrid Prius
is the first model to meet
>Everyone wants to live as well as they humanly can, if that's greed,
>they I plead guilty.
Of course one wants to live the best possible, but (don't take this
personally), I was taught when it was my turn at the cookie jar that I did not
fill my pockets, cram as many as possible in my mouth an
On 10/8/2007 12:28 PM, thomas malloy wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> ...I also have heard of supply manipulation to increase
>> profit.
>>
Small potatoes compared to the profits derived from
demand driven by government policy.
Harry
Hey this is confusing since I do not understand the context, but there
are some decent COP numbers and more evidence of an anomaly with Al foil
- was it all calorimetry error?
...but no - I doubt seriously if he was "darklord" since he was not into
computers ... (but he did have a precocious g
On Aug 10, 2007, at 10:03 AM, Jones Beene wrote:
--- Horace Heffner wrote:
Too bad the above melting point is for D2O and not
DHO.
I have not been able to find the exact melting point
for DHO, but perhaps it does not matter all that
much
... since in any situation where there is subst
On Aug 10, 2007, at 9:36 AM, thomas malloy wrote:
Horace Heffner wrote:
On Aug 9, 2007, at 9:10 PM, thomas malloy wrote:
R.C.Macaulay wrote:
Howdy Vorts,
Is there a relationship between solar activity and earthquakes ?
ccording to Richard C Hoagland, www.enterprisemission.com ,
ther
On Jul 19, 2007, at 3:44 PM, Jones Beene wrote:
BTW - I was planning a separate post on a few 'anecdotal' Candu
trade secrets which I have recorded from an old fried, now
departed. My notes are riddled with inconsistencies, however.
Say, that old friend was not "darklord" was it? He wa
--- Horace Heffner wrote:
> Too bad the above melting point is for D2O and not
> DHO.
I have not been able to find the exact melting point
for DHO, but perhaps it does not matter all that
much
... since in any situation where there is substantial
DHO, a certain equilibrium proportion of D2O
Horace Heffner wrote:
On Aug 9, 2007, at 9:10 PM, thomas malloy wrote:
R.C.Macaulay wrote:
Howdy Vorts,
Is there a relationship between solar activity and earthquakes ?
ccording to Richard C Hoagland, www.enterprisemission.com , there is
an explanation based on hyperdimensional physic
On Jul 19, 2007, at 3:44 PM, Jones Beene wrote:
Comparison of an interesting but largely neglected physical
property which can be exploited in enriching heavy water:
H2OD2O
melting point 0 C 3.84 C
compare that spread with the most used separation
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Have you ever heard of supply and demand?
For sure I have, and I also have heard of supply manipulation to increase
profit.
The oil companies are out to charge as much as the market will bare.
However the world wide automobile population is exploding, and more
plan
i would also wonder if large amounts of the various radiations that
make it through would cause heating deeper in the crust, for example
in underground water pockets and oil pockets. similar to a small
pocket of grease below the skin of that piece of chicken in the
microwave heating and exploding.
I neglected to mention that greenhouse effect warming can overwhelm
the minor changes that occur in solar radiance due to the solar cycle.
Horace Heffner
http://www.mtaonline.net/~hheffner/
On Aug 9, 2007, at 9:10 PM, thomas malloy wrote:
R.C.Macaulay wrote:
Howdy Vorts,
Is there a relationship between solar activity and earthquakes ?
An increase in seismic activity worldwide has been predicted.
How valid ? Inquiring minds want to know.
According to Richard C Hoagland, www
> Question #4, the answer to which is no, shows you have completely
> missed the point with regard to the proposed mechanisms.
No, no, my point was general, not limited to the context of your devices.
Michel
- Original Message -
From: "Horace Heffner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Fr
On Aug 10, 2007, at 12:18 AM, Michel Jullian wrote:
In any event, give me the time to rewrite the article and we can
discuss these issues further then.
Your disbelief that only differences of potentials matter (which is
a fact, a very fundamental one) affects many parts of your
otherwise
LOS ANGELES - Tesla Motors' all-electric Roadster sports car will start
rolling out to nearly 600 buyers lined up for the $100,000 vehicle by
October or November, after a slight delay, the company's chief said on
Tuesday. "We will definitely ship in that time frame," CEO and co-founder
Martin Eber
Don't think I said this, may have been Jones Beene?
I don''t make educated guesses, I just guess.
-Original Message-
>From: thomas malloy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Sent: Aug 10, 2007 12:30 AM
>To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
>Subject: Re: [Vo]:The meaning of ...
>
>Jones Beene wrote:
>
>> [EMAIL PROTE
>Have you ever heard of supply and demand?
For sure I have, and I also have heard of supply manipulation to increase
profit.
Why not shut done portions of refineries and reduce apparent supply to bring
about price increase?
I also hear the mantra that oil companies don't set price that the sto
> In any event, give me the time to rewrite the article and we can
> discuss these issues further then.
Your disbelief that only differences of potentials matter (which is a fact, a
very fundamental one) affects many parts of your otherwise valuable work, not
just your unfortunate changes to f
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