Rossi never claimed the customer used all the heat in the process. He
said the balance was vented.
On 8/13/2016 11:09 AM, Jed Rothwell wrote:
a.ashfield <a.ashfi...@verizon.net <mailto:a.ashfi...@verizon.net>> wrote:
Rossi answered the question n his blog, saying the the customer
used the heat in an endothermic process.
That is impossible. There are endothermic industrial processes, but
they use only a tiny faction of the heat. The rest is waste heat.
Textbooks often list baking bread as a typical endothermic process.
Most of heat comes out of the oven, which is why a bakery is hot.
Frankly, I am astounded that anyone would take this statement by Rossi
at face value. It is even more preposterous than his usual oeuvre.
I also gather the revised response showing photos of the
customer's space conveniently left out showing the ventilation system.
That is incorrect. The photos in Exhibit 26 clearly show the
ventilation system. If that is the customer site in the enclosed area,
then the entire 1 MW of heat would be released in this suite, which is
100% absolutely utterly COMPLETELY ridiculous.
The text accompanying Exhibit 25 is a little unclear to me. It says:
82. Indeed, when Murray eventually gained access to the Plant in
February 2016 and examined the Plant, the methodology being used
to operate the Plant, and the methodology being used to measure
those operations, he immediately recognized that those
methodologies were fatally flawed. Some of the flaws that he was
quickly able to identify are explained in Exhibit 5. Murray also
recognized that the building in which the Plant was located had no
method to ventilate the heat that would be produced by the Plant
were it producing the amount of steam claimed by Rossi, Leonardo,
and Penon such that persons would not have been able to work
in the building if the Rossi/Leonardo/Penon claims were true. This
conflicted with the claims of individuals who had been in the
building when the Plant was operating, all of whom claimed
the temperature in the building was near or not much greater than
the outside temperature. Photographs of the building ceiling from
the inside are attached hereto as Exhibit 26.
- Jed