So, do you need help with that spice model?  The remainder of your discussion 
is nothing more than using words to avoid the issue.  It would take you less 
time to perform the spice experiment than to write a million words that prove 
nothing.

You wrote a large number of unsubstantiated and untrue statements which I want 
to take apart one by one.  It takes far too much time and is frankly boring to 
the other members of vortex to respond with the volume of material needed to 
rebut each one.  That is why I ask you to concentrate upon one of your choice.  
Is that asking too much?

Dave


-----Original Message-----
From: Joshua Cude <joshua.c...@gmail.com>
To: vortex-l <vortex-l@eskimo.com>
Sent: Fri, May 31, 2013 2:01 pm
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Ekstrom critique of Levi et al.



On Fri, May 31, 2013 at 8:59 AM, David Roberson <dlrober...@aol.com> wrote:

Bring on your proof that what I have pointed out is not true.   Take a few 
moments to show how DC flowing into the control box due to its internal 
rectification changes the power delivered to it. 



You're just repeating your arguments and ignoring the responses I've already 
given to them. Obviously I have no proof. How could I? True believers insist on 
an explanation of how deception might explain the alleged observations, but do 
not hold themselves to the same standard to give an explanation for how nuclear 
reactions could be initiated in those circumstances, or how they could produce 
that much heat without radiation, or how NiH could produce 100 times the power 
density of nuclear fuel without melting, regardless of what produces the 
energy. That doesn't stop you from believing it happens though.


There's various ways to create illusions, and I don't necessarily know how it 
might have been done. But I know there was a rat's nest of wires, and an 
unnecessarily complex method of supplying power, and that deception on Rossi's 
part is far more likely than cold fusion.


Most people looking at the cheese power video could not prove there was a trick 
from the video alone, and especially not from a paper written to describe the 
experiment, by people who actually believed in cheese power. But that doesn't 
mean they would not be nearly certain there is one.  


And it would be easy for anyone with elementary knowledge of electricity to set 
up an experiment to demonstrate cheese-power unequivocally, if it were real. 
Likewise, the same could be done for the ecat. But when they use 3-phase, when 
single would do, when the wiring is in place ahead of time, when close 
associates choose the instruments which are completely inadequate, when the 
blank run uses different conditions, when the input timing is determined from a 
video tape, when the COP just happens to equal the reciprocal of the duty 
cycle, when the power supply box is off-limits, and the power measurements are 
restricted, and when the claim is as unlikely as cheese-power, it is ok to be 
suspicious.











 
 You will fail miserably I assure you!  You love to make unsupported statements 
and then fail to do any of the simple tests required to clear up your 
misunderstanding.  I have waited a long time for you or Andrew or Duncan to 
make that spice model that will demonstrate that what I say is accurate.  I 
will be happy to help you set up a model that will take perhaps 15 minutes of 
your time to run.  If you do not know how to makes such a model then you should 
remove yourself from this discussion since that would demonstrate a lack of 
understanding of basic EE knowledge.


Dave



-----Original Message-----
From: Joshua Cude <joshua.c...@gmail.com>
To: vortex-l <vortex-l@eskimo.com>

Sent: Fri, May 31, 2013 4:19 am
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Ekstrom critique of Levi et al.




On Thu, May 30, 2013 at 3:35 PM, David Roberson <dlrober...@aol.com> wrote:


I thought that the DC issue was put to rest. 




Only according to the credulous true believers. Essen said they excluded it, 
but he didn't say how. If we're just going to accept what they say without 
scrutiny, then why bother reading the paper at all? Just accept their 
conclusions and rejoice.


Except that Essen said of the steam tests that the steam was dry based on a 
visual inspection, and then based on a measurement with a relative humidity 
probe. So, I'm not prepared to accept his claim at face value. And even if his 
measurements do exclude dc in the exposed conductors, I'm not prepared to 
accept that a concealed conductor was not there.


There's various ways to create illusions, and I don't necessarily know how it 
might have been done. But I know there was a rat's nest of wires, and an 
unnecessarily complex method of supplying power, and that deception on Rossi's 
part is far more likely than the sort of power density they claim without 
melting, let alone a nuclear reaction.

 

 It can be easily shown that there is not amount of diode trickery which can be 
put into the control box that will confuse the primary power measurement. 






I don't agree. Just because you or I can't think of diode trickery doesn't mean 
it's not possible. You or I can't think of any nuclear reactions to explain the 
results either, but that doesn't seem to convince you that it's not possible. 
You should keep an open mind to possibilities you have not thought of.



 

 DC input has been eliminated so that is not an issue due to direct observation 
by one or more of the test personnel.






Except we don't know the observation, so it's not convincing.
 

 
There is noting left to clarify as far as the input is concerned.  




Manipulation of the mains line is a far smaller perturbation than used in many 
similar scale scams. Concealed conductors can make the current look like it's 
zero, or could carry dc or high frequency power. 



 

And you also agree that duty cycle operation is obvious by output waveform 
picture review. 




No. I disagreed with that at least 3 times. Maybe you missed them.


I don't see your problem here. Yes, the modulation of the temperature is 
consistent with the modulation of the input, but it says nothing about the 
actual power level in the alleged off part of the cycle. The claim is that the 
ecat is sustained in the off-cycle, so the decay curve is consistent with the 
total power *not* going to zero. All the skeptics are claiming is that you'd 
get the same thing if the input drops to the same level as the level the ecat 
is claimed to be producing by itself during the off cycle. And that could be 
done using the cheese power method with a voltage divider or a variac or 
something. 


I'm not saying that's how it was done. I'm saying that the unnecessarily 
indirect output measurement, the unnecessarily complex input supply and the 
inadequate input measurement, and the blank that was run under different 
conditions, makes the entire operation suspicious and leaves possibilities for 
deception. I just don't believe someone who actually had an energy source with 
MJ+/g, that could produce hundreds of watts at a COP of 3, would demonstrate in 
this way. It could be made so much better. And so I remain skeptical. When 
nothing comes of this in a year, will you be a little more skeptical?



 

 The viewed duty cycle matches that stated within the report.  Anyone that 
suggests a cheese power type scam is not looking at the evidence.
 




It matches the frequency. Anyone who suggests the evidence proves it goes to 
zero in the off-cycle does not understand the evidence. Cheese power is far 
more likely than nickel powder with a power density 100 times that of uranium 
in a fission reactor, let alone than the possibility of nuclear reactions in 
that context.



 

Any RF power input would cause serious disruption of the test reading with any 
change of position of the probes.  If that is not seen, the scope would have 
detected it.  






Essen said they did not use a scope, and I'm not convinced it would affect 
meters that have a limited response in the 60 Hz range.



 

 It is time for the skeptics to leave this poor horse alone.
 




Many people suspected James Ernst Worrell Keely of fraud and deception, but no 
one knew exactly how he did it, and his supporters dismissed the skeptics. 
After his death, a most elaborate and complex series of hidden devices were 
found below the floors and behind walls and so on. 


There are many more recent examples as well such as Madison Priest and Stoern 
and Papp and so on. This sort of thing is utterly common, but the claimed 
scientific revolution is rare indeed. 



And all of this is independent of how much you want it to be true.





















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