The next question is a 3phases AC supply needed to reproduce the eCat effect? The cold eCat don't use a 3phases power supply but Rossi could have used magnet inside the cold eCat (Samarium cobalt magnet).
_____ From: Bob Higgins [mailto:rj.bob.higg...@gmail.com] Sent: jeudi 16 octobre 2014 22:31 To: vortex-l@eskimo.com Subject: Re: [Vo]:Engineering and materials issues with high temperature hot-cat Lugano demo I think we are describing pretty much the same thing. Only I don't believe there is anything but refractory castable insulation in the large diameter support cylinders at the end of the convection tube. I think the heater coils are axial and the 3-phase drive produces a linear conveyer, which when it gets to the physical end of the tube will fold in on itself coaxially. Moving field is the reason for the 3-phase drive. On Thu, Oct 16, 2014 at 2:19 PM, Arnaud Kodeck <arnaud.kod...@lakoco.be> wrote: So why then does Rossi use a 3phases electrical power source? For such kind of power this not needed. 1000W uses less than 5A. So my guess is that Rossi uses the Rotating magnetic field in its Ecat (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotating_magnetic_field ). In this schema, the end caps could be a magnetic mirror (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetic_mirror ). In this configuration the Ni and Li plasma can't get out of the confinement and the 3 phases give also a rotation to this field. But I'm not an expert in magnetic confinement and how to achieve it. _____ From: Bob Higgins [mailto:rj.bob.higg...@gmail.com] Sent: jeudi 16 octobre 2014 19:00 To: vortex-l@eskimo.com Subject: Re: [Vo]:Engineering and materials issues with high temperature hot-cat Lugano demo Seems to me that at the temperatures we are talking about (>1000C) that bulk magnetic effects are probably out of the question. A plasma of Li would be a conductor and a conductor could be conveyed in a moving magnetic field. I don't think any motion will occur because of any bulk magnetic affects - these are all gone at this temperature. This temperature also makes it difficult to consider magnetically confined condensates as Yeong Kim has described. On Thu, Oct 16, 2014 at 10:50 AM, Bob Cook <frobertc...@hotmail.com> wrote: Bob. Amaud, etal-- I had the same thought as Amaud. The wiring arrangement may be deigned to create a magnetic field inside the reactor to align magnetic moments of the various entities and facilitate resonant interactions at varying probabilities to control the rate of reaction.