Right, the key to profiting on Rossi's large water heaters is the servicing
as well as the installation, and replaceable cartrides including H2 would be
optimal. He needs a cartridge that is essentially rented out with a large
cash deposit to deter reverse engineering, making sure the cartridges are
not pilfered and opened. And he needs to limit their life, so they have to
be changed out regularly.

I predict Rossi will not divulge anything useful for repeating his process
in patent apps, since the chance of a patent is slim anyway; just get these
industrial water heaters sold before the NRC and their worldwide equivalents
put a halt to them, or the W/L patent is proved to be correct and the means
by which gamma is eliminated, meaning W/L can license and demand royalties..



----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Terry Blanton" <hohlr...@gmail.com>
To: <vortex-l@eskimo.com>
Sent: Thursday, April 28, 2011 6:27 PM
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Success for Rossi will bringing funding for others


> I'm not convinced that the ECat will require a hydrogen source.  He
> once stated that the ECat will run off a "replaceable cartridge" that
> will be replaced every 6 (?) months.
>
> Now, considering the amount of hydrogen required, why not supply a H2
> pressurized cartridge with the powder magic mixture?  If you do the
> math, I think you will see that no new hydrogen will be required for
> the cartridge before the Ni turns to Cu.
>
> T
>

Reply via email to