Have you determined whether or not this is a reversible process?  How often 
does the lower energy hydrino accept energy from a catalyst that has not yet 
released the same amount of energy in the form of radiation?  It is common for 
energy to be traded in both directions according to thermodynamic laws.

Dave


-----Original Message-----
From: P.J van Noorden <pjvannoor...@caiway.nl>
To: vortex-l <vortex-l@eskimo.com>
Sent: Sat, Nov 30, 2013 5:46 pm
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Re:



Collision of atomic hydrogen with a element or compound (called a catalyst) 
that can accept n times 27.2 eV ( 2 times the ionistaion energy of hydrogen) 
destabilises the electron, which falls to a lower fractional quantum level, 
thereby releasing energy. 
 
----- Original Message ----- 
  
From:   Axil Axil   
  
To: vortex-l 
  
Sent: Saturday, November 30, 2013 6:48   PM
  
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Re:
  


  
According to Mill theory, what causes the electron/hydrino to   enter the 
fractional charge state?
  


  
On Sat, Nov 30, 2013 at 12:08 PM, P.J van Noorden <pjvannoor...@caiway.nl> 
wrote:
  
    
    
Hello Steven,
    
 
    
There have been validation reports about the working     of the CIHT cell and 
in the month of december new validation reports will be     relased as well as 
a press release. I think the main issue is now to prevent     the electrodes 
fro degrading and to increase the surface density
    
 
    
Peter
    
 
    
      
      
-----       Original Message ----- 
      
From:       OrionWorks - Steven Vincent Johnson 
      
      
      
To:       vortex-l@eskimo.com 
      
Sent:       Saturday, November 30, 2013 5:31 PM
      
Subject:       RE: [Vo]:Re:
      


      
      
Hi        P.J.
      
 
      
Thanks for the       report. I must confess I have not monitored the BLP 
website for some time.       It would be nice to discover I missed some juicy 
news.       
      
 
      
You mention the       fact that -a- 10W C1HT cell has been developed (and 
presumably       demonstrated?) within BLP's labs. Do you feel fairly confident 
that the       10W prototype actually does what BLP claims? If so, there must   
    exist a LOT of prototypes in various evolutionary stages focusing on out    
   how to get the engineering to endure high temperatures without degrading.    
   I’m assuming the C1HT chemistry is highly caustic, particularly at the       
high temperatures needed.
      
 
      
If this is all       true I think BLP is more than capable of succeeding. But 
will they be able       to make a commercial success out of their efforts? 
Depends on how long       will it take them to get a product out on the shelves 
of Wall Mart. One       year? Ten more years? Who knows. We all know there are 
other competitors       veiling for the same slice of the pie. Humans are a 
very clever species.       When motivated, such as getting caught in the 
aphrodisiac of making       obscene piles of money, or something as simple as 
promises of sexual       favors, we monkeys can accomplish just about anything. 
Having been blessed       with thumbs does help. Woody Allan was wrong in 
Sleeper. The thumb       should be considered the “second favorite organ”. 
(Here’s a little weekend       down-time humor.)
      
 
      
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ngizj5FIcjo
      
 
      
You appear to       be taking the place of Mike Carrell when it comes to 
reporting on the       status of BLP's R&D efforts. Again, thanks for the 
report, P.J.       Hopefully, Mike is listening in. ;-)
      
 
      
Regards,
      
Steven Vincent       Johnson
      
svjart.OrionWorks.com
      
www.zazzle.com/orionworks
      
tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/newvortex/
      
 
      
 
      
      
      
From: P.J van       Noorden [mailto:pjvannoor...@caiway.nl] 
Sent: Saturday,       November 30, 2013 6:35 AM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: Re:       [Vo]:Re:

      
 
      
      
Hello       James,
      
      
 
      
      
According to       BLP the material cost of a CIHT cell of 1kW will cost only   
    $100.
      
      
There are no       expensive materials needed.
      
      
 
      
      
Peter
      
      
 
      
      
 
      
      
 
      
      
----- Original Message ----- 
      
        
        
From: James Bowery 
        
        
To: vortex-l 
        
        
Sent: Saturday,         November 30, 2013 8:44 AM
        
        
Subject: Re:         [Vo]:Re:
        
        
 
        
        
How much does a 10W cell cost in quantity         one?
        
        
 
        
        
On Sat, Nov 30, 2013 at 12:36 AM, P.J van Noorden         
<pjvannoor...@caiway.nl> wrote:
        
Hello         Steven

Blacklightpower has made a 10W CIHT cell which can produce         electricity 
from watervapour.
The composition of the electrode is         such that the hydrino producing 
reaction is facilitated and the         electronshifts caused by transition of 
the electrons to sub groundstate         levels can be used externally like in 
a battery. These cells work at         high temperature ( few hundred dgrC ) so 
they must be well insulated. By         using a very good insulation the cell 
should stay hot, bcs the reaction         will also produce heat. The focus of 
BLP lies in the construction of an         electrode that can function at such 
a high temperature for a very long         time without degradation and to 
scaleup the powerdensity of the reaction         in order to make the cell more 
compact. To build a system of 1000W would         then be relatively simple by 
using 100 cells.

Peter v         Noorden


----- Original Message ----- From: "OrionWorks -         Steven Vincent 
Johnson" <orionwo...@charter.net>
To: <vortex-l@eskimo.com>
Sent: Saturday, November         30, 2013 12:42 AM
Subject: [Vo]:


        
This was recently posted         out on the Yahoo group: "Society for Classical
Physics",
Dr.         Mill's Yahoo group:
        
The recent FAQ under the CIHT topic mentions that         "The CIHT cell has
been scaled to 10 W, and a development projection         with the achieved
significant increase in surface power density is a         1.5 kW electric 
module
that can be ganged accordingly to serve larger         power applications." It
also talks about the 1.5kw pre-production         prototype expected by the end
of 2013.

Here we are near the         end of 2013 and I have to ask, why aren't we 
hearing
about a public         demo of the 10W version? It was actually projected for a
couple of         years ago and is apparently working at BLP. We keep hearing
about the         scaling up, but as another poster observed earlier, "nothing
to hang         your hat on". Whither the 10W demo?

-- Lynn
        

I'll be curious to         find out what Dr. Mills might choose to say on the
matter.

I         thought the web site was monitored. I was surprised to see it get     
    posted.

Regards,
Steven Vincent Johnson
svjart.OrionWorks.com
www.zazzle.com/orionworks
tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/newvortex/
        
 
        
 








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