I tried this and it looks really kewl indeed. The potassium chloride I used 
was pure enough that if you do a simple flame test, you don't get any of that 
yellow-orange sodium color. I watched the sparking with a 1500 lpm diffraction 
grating and the double D lines of sodium are way too bright to be accounted for 
from the potassium chloride. So it's either transmutation (unlikely), or the 
energy produced by the sparking is enough to remove some sodium from the wall 
of the glass container.

I didn't see any of the characteristic hydrino spectral lines :-)


     On Thursday, June 10, 2021, 02:30:37 AM GMT+1, Jones Beene 
<jone...@pacbell.net> wrote:  
 
 FWIW - I ran across a simple experiment while looking around for a science 
fair project for a neighbor's son ... 

There are not many experiments which are both robust, cheap and don't require 
complex data logging to suggest the energy anomaly. One needs to find a 
discarded microwave oven of course...

https://www.sciencemadness.org/whisper/viewthread.php?tid=74572


  

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