Robert Leguillon <robert.leguil...@hotmail.com> wrote:

I saw it in the video, but this JPEG makes it even more obvious. Thanks for
> the upload.
> You've got 120+ degrees (allegedly) on one side . . .


Why do you say "allegedly"? It was boiling in the cell. It has be over 100
deg C. Add some backpressure from the heat exchanger and it will reach 120
deg C. That's not an allegation, it is first principle physics.



> , and a couple inches away less than 30 degrees. A few degrees of heat
> transfer is lauded as conclusive, irrefutable evidence of a multi-kilowatt
> cold fusion reactor?
>

It is irrefutable proof of that it was still hot 3 hours after the power was
turned off and 1.8 tons of water went through the system. There is no chance
it would measurably warm after that if there were no heat generation.

Other irrefutable proof is that the reactor was still hot, and the water was
still boiling inside it. You can ignore the temperature measurements and
prove there was an anomaly by that fact alone. Or, if you can refute that,
please do so.

Also you are forgetting that the thermal mass of the cooling water is far
greater than the hot water. When you combine them together and the cooling
water rises 5 deg C while the steam condenses and falls 95 deg C. Obviously
the overall system will be closer to the cooling water temperature.

Pipes do conduct heat well, but not so much from one pipe to the one next to
it. In any case, the pipes will average it out to be a temperature much
closer to the cooling water than the steam.


You are looking at a mountain of evidence and pretending it does not exist.
Boiling. High temperatures hours after the power went off. Increasing
temperature when Newton's law says the temperature can only fall in the
absence of power. Granted this evidence is poorly presented, but I do not
think that you or anyone else can refute it, so it is irrefutable.

- Jed

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