Jed—

I hope you are right about no muon radiation, but I would check LENR devices 
for muon releases and not rely on your authority.

A good basis for engineers is to assume the devil is in the details; and LENR 
has many details, most os which are not well understood, is understood at all.

Bob Cook

From: Jed Rothwell<mailto:jedrothw...@gmail.com>
Sent: Wednesday, May 31, 2017 11:29 AM
To: Vortex<mailto:vortex-l@eskimo.com>
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Great quote from Benjamin Franklin

Axil Axil <janap...@gmail.com<mailto:janap...@gmail.com>> wrote:

A good engineer will imagine a billion ways in which an invention will fail so 
that invention is built to avoid all those failure modes.
It is not possible to avoid a billion failure modes, or even 100. A product 
designed to avoid too many modes will not work. It will have so many layers of 
protection they will interfere with one another. Early designs for many 
products suffer from this problem. For example, a railroad locomotive design on 
paper (that was never built) had spikes in the wheels, and holes in the rails, 
to prevent slipping. This would never have worked in the real world.

You have to discover first whether a failure is possible, or plausible. If it 
is not, a design to avoid that problem will itself be cause problems, interfere 
with other functions, and add unnessary cost and complexity. For example, 
suppose you imagine that cold fusion causes intense muon radiation. You might 
take steps to avoid damage from this. These steps will cost money, and they may 
interfere with the operation of the machine or cause a safety problem. It is a 
fact easily established that cold fusion does not cause muon radiation. This is 
an imaginary problem. So there is no need for protection against it. Adding 
unnessary protection and unwanted features to a product does not make it 
better. Keep doing this and the product becomes unusable, and even dangerous.

- Jed


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