On Thu, 18 Jun 2009, Horace Heffner wrote:
On Jun 18, 2009, at 12:29 AM, William Beaty wrote:
There's a 100% replicable CF experiment. People on other lists are
trying it out.
What lists?
Tap-L, Phys-L physics lists. He only attracted a few takers. He's
sending out fresh CR39 and
Great sounding solution, yeah I don't read most either.
Hell, is it just me or are people less likely to respond to a personal email
these days? I have both sent them off with no reply and been guilty of not
replying in a timely manner and possibly forgetting to do so myself a few
times.
There
Kyle, just a thought.
About the voltage to charge the cap the following things could be used to do
so smoothly and easily/cheaply:
Capacitors of a greater value (for one shot attempts)
A number of 9v batteries in series
I do like your idea about the HV to trigger it and a more minimal voltage to
Ed you need to search for Heavy Fermion Superconductivity to find out what
the non-cold fusion community
is doing with proton superconductions.
Several people have suggested that a Bose Condensate is involved. I have
trouble with this concept because these structures are expected to have very
On Fri, Jun 19, 2009 at 12:46 AM, William Beatybi...@eskimo.com wrote:
Polycarbonate is also said to work. Originally discovered in Apollo crew
helmets, Lexan?
The material in some eyeglasses.
Terry
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/06/090618131402.htm
Possibly something to do with solar jet streams not behaving as they
have in the past.
Regards
Steven Vincent Johnson
www.OrionWorks.com
www.zazzle.com/orionworks
try this link Ed..there is a lot out there on proton superconductivity if you
care to look
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg18624984.400-superconductors-have-no-need-to-be-negative.html
-Original Message-
From: fznidar...@aol.com
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Sent: Fri, Jun 19, 2009
This is a nice imaginative theory described in the article, Frank, but
it does not prove that Bose Condensates of hydrogen exist. In fact,
such structure should show up as anomalies in diffusion, which they do
not. If a structure containing H(D) can move through the lattice
without
My knowledge of quantum effects is rather provincial, so please take
this into consideration concerning the quality of my question.
I've heard of a phenomenon akin to subatomic particles being able to
bore effortlessly through atoms in a manner roughly similar to
playing croquet, where you place
Try quantum tunneling.
Terry
On Fri, Jun 19, 2009 at 11:09 AM, OrionWorkssvj.orionwo...@gmail.com wrote:
My knowledge of quantum effects is rather provincial, so please take
this into consideration concerning the quality of my question.
I've heard of a phenomenon akin to subatomic particles
On Jun 18, 2009, at 9:46 PM, William Beaty wrote:
On Thu, 18 Jun 2009, Horace Heffner wrote:
The price of CR-39 is quite bothersome for amateurs like me though.
It would be good to find a cheaper alternative!
I have a couple pounds of it, 1.5mm thickness, unknown age. I only
just
- Original Message -
From: Edmund Storms stor...@ix.netcom.com
Date: Thursday, June 18, 2009 10:16 am
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Fringe
To avoid making yourself ill with worry, let me add a bit of
optimism. Cold fusion has left the garage level of research and
entered the level of a well
That is because (at thermal frequencies) the co-herance length is about 50nm.
There is normal material between these hyperconducing grains that blocks
diffusion. Hyperconducting referes to superconductivity at a specific
frequency.
-Original Message-
From: Edmund Storms
Ed, this super-diffuser idea could lead to a good experiement to test the Bose
condensate idea.
The coherence length at thermal frequencies is 50nm. Assuming the product that
I get applies to this
system 1.094 megahertz-meters, the coherence length should be longer with radio
frequency
This might be something KivaLabs could try, Frank. We are using radio
frequency for other purposes, which would make this use relatively
simple. However, since PdD is a conductor, the RF would induce a
current of that frequency in the metal surface. The interior where
diffusion occurs
The garage researcher can get into the act anytime. In fact, most of
us at the margins of the professional community, as you say, were
garage men initially. My only point was that garage men will not
contribute much to an understanding of the process. Later, when
engineering improvements
Ed, You are making the experiment to hard. All that is need is a @ 5 inch
palladium wire. The wire would be run through a divider. On one side of
the wall would be low pressure hydrogen. On the other side would be water
though which you could see the hydrogen bubbling. Connect a
No, for that you need armchair types.
On Sat, Jun 20, 2009 at 9:17 AM, Edmund Storms stor...@ix.netcom.comwrote:
The garage researcher can get into the act anytime. In fact, most of us at
the margins of the professional community, as you say, were garage men
initially. My only point was that
Looks like a load of BS to me. Ask him to demonstrate his on-demand
lightning strike routine to you, but don't hold your breath until he
does :)
Removal of the outside sphere in a spherical capacitor is not
complicated BTW, just do it by bits. Only beware it takes work
(energy) to pull the
Note: I replied to this initially believing I was replying to a list I
joined for the Gray conversion tube, so it's slanted in that direction.
On Sat, Jun 20, 2009 at 10:06 AM, Michel Jullian michelj...@gmail.comwrote:
Looks like a load of BS to me. Ask him to demonstrate his on-demand
Design News (6/09) magazine cover shouts Slamming Amps and shows how
electric racers are beating muscle cars at the strip.
An electric 1978 Ford Pinto did a 12. 4 sec quarter mile. A street legal
electric Datsun did 11.4 and an electric motorcycle (Killacycle) did it in 7.8
sec.
The beauty
Steven wrote:
The point behind this meandering follow-up post is the fact that the bubble
rings these dolphins
were manufacturing, once formed, were exceedingly stable as they traveled
through the much more
dense medium of water. They were quite circular as well. Now, consider the fact
that
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