Re: [Vo]:A dreadful price to pay

2012-11-11 Thread Robert Lynn
Another hyperbolic Climate Change scare story. Arabica is grown between 600 and 2000m altitude. At typical 0.65°C per 100m lapse rate in tropics that is a about an 8°C temperature range. The world warmed by 0.7°C last century, (though no rise in last 15 years) so that the same temperature occurs

Re: [Vo]:A dreadful price to pay

2012-11-11 Thread Axil Axil
All Jamaica Blue Mountain coffee is grown from the Arabica species of coffee. So sad, this product is also on the road to eventual extinction. Cheers: Axil On Sun, Nov 11, 2012 at 7:54 PM, Terry Blanton wrote: > On Sun, Nov 11, 2012 at 7:17 PM, Axil Axil wrote: > > Climate change threat to A

Re: [Vo]:Supersonic shockwave acceleration processes

2012-11-11 Thread Axil Axil
Seeing your negative reaction to this factoid, I wanted to make sure that this information came from LeClair himself since it may be prejudicial to his credibility. To the best of my present knowledge after a bit of research, the original source of this tree and wall story came from Steven B. Kriv

Re: [Vo]:A dreadful price to pay

2012-11-11 Thread Terry Blanton
On Sun, Nov 11, 2012 at 7:17 PM, Axil Axil wrote: > Climate change threat to Arabica coffee crops > > http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-20252472 > > > The dreadful price wrought by climate change mounts increasingly higher. There's always Jamaican Blue Mountain.

Re: [Vo]:Supersonic shockwave acceleration processes

2012-11-11 Thread Jed Rothwell
David Roberson wrote: I can not imagine how LeClair and his friends escaped injury from these > crystals if they were dense enough in numbers to damage trees outside the > lab. Yes. This is preposterous. The fragments were supposedly tiny, but they still would have been blinded, bleeding and se

Re: [Vo]:Supersonic shockwave acceleration processes

2012-11-11 Thread David Roberson
I can not imagine how LeClair and his friends escaped injury from these crystals if they were dense enough in numbers to damage trees outside the lab. You have to wonder how the damage was discovered since each of the paths appears to be microscopic. Dave -Original Message- From: A

Re: [Vo]:Supersonic shockwave acceleration processes

2012-11-11 Thread David Roberson
Axil says: Also, a confining coil that constraints the shockwave to the center of the cylinder increases the speed of the shockwave by 20%. It would be interesting to vary the intensity of this axially confining force to see how the acceleration of the shockwave and the associated power delive

[Vo]:MFMP data sets

2012-11-11 Thread Eric Walker
As you know, the Martin Fleischmann Memorial Project are making their data available. I downloaded some of the data files and recreated one of the graphs. The graph is basically the same, but it looks like they're doing some smoothing: http://rolling-balance.blogspot.com/2012/11/at-conference-th

Re: [Vo]:Supersonic shockwave acceleration processes

2012-11-11 Thread Jeff Berkowitz
Kidding aside, I'm going to channel Mary Yugo here for a minute. Back in Februrary, NanoSpire "...announced that its investigative study on fusion created by cavitation in water has come to an end." http://www.nanotech-now.com/news.cgi?story_id=44551 (Dr. Storms is mentioned.) These experiments a

Re: [Vo]:High energy protons emissions/Nov.1 Piantelli Patent

2012-11-11 Thread mixent
In reply to Eric Walker's message of Sun, 11 Nov 2012 11:13:34 -0800: Hi, [snip] >In the slides, Takahashi raises several objections to Ni+p: > >1. Ni+p is implausible because the proton would get caught up in the outer >electron shells before it made it to the nucleus. >2. There should be lethal

Re: [Vo]:Supersonic shockwave acceleration processes

2012-11-11 Thread Jeff Berkowitz
Sorry, I cannot resist, though I'm sure it's appeared here before. *Buzz *: I need to repair my turbo boosters. Are you still using fossil fuels, or have you discovered crystallic fusion? *Woody *: Well, let's see, we got do

Re: [Vo]:Supersonic shockwave acceleration processes

2012-11-11 Thread Axil Axil
“Whatever it is, it seems that the presence of the metal/water surface is important for this second effect to be self sustaining. It appears that there is feedback which results in the projectile neither burrowing into the metal or leaving the metal surface. I feel there is a clue here somewhere”

Re: [Vo]:Supersonic shockwave acceleration processes

2012-11-11 Thread Axil Axil
Concerning Reference: http://open-source-energy.org/forum/attachment.php?aid=2569 Plasma Flow in an Electromagnetic Shock Tube and in a Compression shock Tube The distant that the shockwave can travel in a shock tube can be very great compared to the distance of travel in a Papp cylinder becaus

Re: [Vo]:High energy protons emissions/Nov.1 Piantelli Patent

2012-11-11 Thread Eric Walker
On Sat, Nov 10, 2012 at 8:06 PM, wrote: "Are Ni+H Nuclear-Reactions Possible" > www.iscmns.org/work10/TakahashiAarenihnucl.ppt > I see now where you're coming from. There has been an ongoing question of whether there is proton capture with the nickel atoms themselves, and I think Andrea Rossi h

Re: [Vo]:Amusing analysis of CF/LENR in the world

2012-11-11 Thread James Bowery
On Sat, Nov 10, 2012 at 11:44 AM, Abd ul-Rahman Lomax wrote: > Never ascribe to evil what can be ascribed to stupidity. > > Better and usually more applicable is the trope: Never ascribe to mere stupidity that which can be ascribed to unenlightened self-interest.

Re: [Vo]:MFMP : Hydrogen Loading Started

2012-11-11 Thread Harry Veeder
hmm there is no "like" button to click. Harry On Sun, Nov 11, 2012 at 1:12 PM, Terry Blanton wrote: > On Sun, Nov 11, 2012 at 5:53 AM, Arnaud Kodeck > wrote: >> Don’t forget, the IP is owned by Celani and his team. Nevertheless, MFMP is >> doing a great job to replicate the Celani’s cell. It’s

Re: [Vo]:MFMP : Hydrogen Loading Started

2012-11-11 Thread Terry Blanton
On Sun, Nov 11, 2012 at 5:53 AM, Arnaud Kodeck wrote: > Don’t forget, the IP is owned by Celani and his team. Nevertheless, MFMP is > doing a great job to replicate the Celani’s cell. It’s nice to do the > replication openly. Furthermore, if the replication is successful, they plan to build 10 mo

Re: [Vo]:MFMP : Hydrogen Loading Started

2012-11-11 Thread Steven Johnson
I think they should eventually give the Nobel prize to the entire group of CF researchers and engineers. Make the point that the development of this technology was actually a collaborative/emergent effort as compared to a single individual. Svj Sent from my iPad (somewhere at a science fiction

RE: [Vo]:MFMP : Hydrogen Loading Started

2012-11-11 Thread Arnaud Kodeck
Don't forget, the IP is owned by Celani and his team. Nevertheless, MFMP is doing a great job to replicate the Celani's cell. It's nice to do the replication openly. _ From: Axil Axil [mailto:janap...@gmail.com] Sent: dimanche 11 novembre 2012 04:54 To: vortex-l@eskimo.com Subject: Re

Re: [Vo]:Supersonic shockwave acceleration processes

2012-11-11 Thread Nigel Dyer
Having discussed what he appears to have seen with Mark L, I ended up coming to the conclusion that there are possibly two separate effects that we may need to consider. First there is whatever it is that happens within the cavitation bubble that starts the process off. In situations where ca