Only if you assume that all or most of the water has been vaporized to dry steam - and besides, Rossi could have started the demo with the storage already more or less heated up. We don't know. Nobody was there and whitnessed the preparations, afaik.
One more thing that doesn't really add up: If you look at the power he's putting in and compare it with the temperature building up, you'll see that significantly more power is consumed than required to heat the water during that phase. Where does it go to? Do LENR reactions genuinely consume heat when they start up? And what chemical or physical or nuclear state do they convert it to? Or is the heat that's NOT immediately consumed by the water simply stored? ________________________________ Von: Harry Veeder <hveeder...@gmail.com> An: Yamali Yamali <yamaliyam...@yahoo.de> Gesendet: 19:36 Freitag, 20.Januar 2012 Betreff: Re: [Vo]:Lewan Mats says he never thought the reactor shipped If water was being heated the whole time, I think such a scheme would require more electrical energy than was measured. Harry On Fri, Jan 20, 2012 at 1:24 PM, Harry Veeder <hveeder...@gmail.com> wrote: > oops i forgot its cubed > Harry > > On Fri, Jan 20, 2012 at 1:07 PM, Yamali Yamali <yamaliyam...@yahoo.de> wrote: >> Harry wrote: "How do you hide 1 cubic meter of iron in the device which was >> tested?" >> >> I don't have to. First of all, less than 100 liters of water were heated in >> the desktop demos - and secondly, 10,000 cm3 are just 10 liters (not 1,000 >> liters) weighing merely 78kg (not over 7,000). The October 28 demo >> supposedly heated 3,700 or so liters in 107 modules. 27kg of iron (a slab of >> 30x20x6cm) per module would have been more than enough (unless I messed up >> the numbers somewhere along the line).