Harry Veeder wrote:
> > The point is, you expect it cool down during deloading, but it sometimes
> > heats up instead. I think Rossi's cell did this on Oct. 6.
>
> Has anyone ever noted an anomalous lack of warming or even a temporary
> cooling during loading?
>
Not to my knowledge.
I guess th
Hi Jed, anything more in from George?
On 9 November 2011 14:29, Jed Rothwell wrote:
> David ledin wrote:
>
>
>> Report On A Conversation With George Miley
>>
>>
>> http://e-catsite.com/2011/11/08/report-on-a-conversation-with-george-miley/
>
>
> That looks impressive with the slides added.
>
>
On Wed, Nov 9, 2011 at 9:29 AM, Jed Rothwell wrote:
> David ledin wrote:
>
>>
>> Report On A Conversation With George Miley
>>
>>
>> http://e-catsite.com/2011/11/08/report-on-a-conversation-with-george-miley/
>
> That looks impressive with the slides added.
> Oops. There is a typo:
> "Although de
David ledin wrote:
> Report On A Conversation With George Miley
>
> http://e-catsite.com/2011/11/08/report-on-a-conversation-with-george-miley/
That looks impressive with the slides added.
Oops. There is a typo:
"Although deloading is chemically endothermic, in some cases they have seen
the
Report On A Conversation With George Miley
http://e-catsite.com/2011/11/08/report-on-a-conversation-with-george-miley/
I spoke with George Miley of the University of Illinois about his most
recent tests with palladium zirconium alloys with gas loading. Here are
some notes from the conversation and some related information about some of
Mizuno's experiments.
A set of PowerPoint slides here shows his results up unti
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