Jones,

As I have previously pointed out, Clarke's analysis is flawed in terms of
COP analysis - perhaps as badly as the analysis by the Lugano researchers.
Failure to recognize and account for the transmitted radiation through the
outer envelope is a BIG error.  Insufficient data was taken and/or reported
that would allow the full radiation to be back calculated, and radiation is
the biggest part of the output.  This transmitted radiation is an
independent output that is only weakly related to the characterized
envelope temperature (as in the incandescent light bulb model).  We will
probably never know what the Lugano COP was, but I believe it to be bigger
than 1.0 and probably around 1.6-2.0.

We know that this type of reactor can be gainful based on Parkhomov's
work.  However, we have no credible evidence for a hotCat operating with a
COP>2.  Clarke's work probably only sets a lower limit on the COP.

On Fri, Apr 8, 2016 at 11:58 AM, Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote:

> If anyone is still operating under the illusion that there was valid
> thermal
> gain at Lugano, please re-educate yourself via the authoritative work of
> Thomas Clarke.
>
>
> https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B1c8DgA3A7ovRVhQcHBweTVNbjg/view?pref=2&pli
> =1
>
> The conclusion: The analysis here shows that the estimated excess heat in
> the Report is wrong, and results from an incorrect assumption that alumina
> is a gray body with temperature-dependent emissivity. In fact alumina has a
> non-gray-body frequency-dependent spectral emissivity that combines with
> Plank's Law to result in a temperature-dependent total emissivity. The
> infra-red thermography results must thus be adjusted using the relevant
> band
> emissivity of alumina, not the temperature-dependent total emissivity.
>
> We show that when this error is corrected the resulting temperature is
> 779C,
> not the claimed 1401C. The total estimated power out from the system shows
> a
> COP of 1.07 and matches power in to within possible experimental error.
> Remarkably, the two tests with 755W and 865W input have very similar COP,
> and this similarity is not very sensitive to changes in parameters such as
> alumina emissivity. Thus the argument for high differential COP used by the
> Report as additional evidence falls and both the COP and differential COP
> are as expected for a system with no excess heat.
>
>
> From: Robert Dorr
>
> > I stand corrected. Rossi said, just today, that I.H built the E-Cat for
> the Lugano test and that they even signed it.
>
> But the Lugano reactor did not produce significant excess heat, after the
> measurement errors were accounted for, so the Lugano fiasco reaffirms the
> stance of IH - that they have never witnessed excess heat in a valid test
> of
> a Rossi reactor.
>
>
>
>
>

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