----- Original Message ----- From: "Horace Heffner" <hheff...@mtaonline.net>
To: <vortex-l@eskimo.com>
Sent: Wednesday, January 07, 2009 4:12 PM
Subject: Re: [Vo]:BLP announces 2nd Commercial license



On Jan 7, 2009, at 6:46 AM, Mike Carrell wrote:

BLP would like to have water-fueld power units on line in a commercial setting in the near future.

What does this mean? I got the impression BLP is to supply fuel material for the involved utilities to be heated in their boiler systems to supply auxiliary heat. Is this incorrect?
------------------
Horace, yes this is incorrect. Go to www.Blacklightpower.com, start with the first page, and do some homework. I can understand from reading only the surface, one can misunderstand what is going on. The chemical cycle is somewhat involved, but the key point is the production of NaH elevated to a critical temperature, at which Na doubly ionizes and catalyzes the proximate H atom to shrink to the H[1/3] state with a further catalysis to the H[1/4] state. The original ingredients, H, R-Ni, and NaOH, can be regenerated and reused so the net comsumable is only H and the end product is H[1/4] with lots of energy. The energy release is great enough that a power unit getting hydrogn by electrolysis of available water and producing useful excess electricity and/or hydrogen gas, is possible. The current devices illustrated on the web page, whose performance is vaidarted by independent measurents at Rowan University, is a clumsy proof of principle. Versions more suitable for a power plant are anticipated. BLP's posture is a license laboratory, not a supplier of a magic mix. The buisness targets include retrofitting of existing boilers, self-standing hydrogen generators for automobiles at service stations, and a new chemistry which may include a hyper-battery.

Mike Carrell

Reply via email to