Други фактори са тези, които обясняват изключителната сила на процеса, категоричен бе той и посочи като един от тях термичната деструкция на водата.
Образуваните по този начин въглерод и кислород след това рекомбинират и може да се каже, че реално има и компонент браунов газ, само че получен по друг начин.
Торсионни полета и космически луминесцент.
Всичко е наред - заплювам си едно такова за хола и една машинка на Андреа Роси в мазето (която прави ток от нищото - 10kW за $1000).
Beta Testing for the Domestic E-CatEridanio, a poster on Andrea Rossi’s Journal of Nuclear Physics, recently suggested to the scientist that the domestic E-Cats could undergo beta testing. In other words, a set number of people, between 1,000 and 10,000, could install the domestic E-Cat in their homes for a set time. If necessary, the testing could be done in a small, isolated geographic area. The Leonardo Corp. in partnership with the certifiers could train, report, and maintain the tests with agreements with the NDA.
This seems similar to beta testing done by pharmaceutical companies. Once they have done exhaustive lab studies and testing, a new drug is tested in a blind study in which some people receive the new medicine, and others receive a placebo. Then, the testing progresses to use of the drug by volunteers, or paid testers. At this stage, the drug is in experimental phase only. During this stage of development, the drug is evaluated for performance in treating the targeted illness, and side-effects are carefully noted. In some cases, the drug reveals that it can be used for a number of different illnesses.
So, why can’t we do that with the E-Cat?
If a person is willing to risk his own home to test the unit, he could be allowed to do so. If there are worries about damage to neighborhoods, only those who live in a rural area would be allowed to test the device. A perimeter could be designated for the safety of others. This seems like a genuinely logical solution. With risks, that’s true.
However, Rossi says, “No”.
“Your option is not allowed. The certification for a domestic device is for all or nobody.”
So maybe, just maybe, this is one case in which the government’s attention would be good as history shows governments have no qualms about testing unknown technology on civilians.
New Cost Estimate For The Domestic E-CatAndrea Rossi’s blog, Journal of Nuclear Physics, has been busy lately. Of course, it’s always busy, but often Rossi’s comments can be few and far between. And, when he does reply to someone’s questions, he often replies with a simple “no” or “yes”.
However, on July 13, (Friday), a poster on Rossi’s blog asked if he had any idea about the projected costs of the 600 degree, 1MW E-Cat, and the 10kW domestic version.
Rossi replied:
“The industrial plants (E-Cats and Hot Cats) have prices that depend on their characteristics, very difficult to generalize. The domestic will be around $1000 USD, after the certification and depending on the requirements of the certificator.”
The first industrial E-Cat plant was reportedly sold for $1 million. The domestic version was rumored to cost from $400 to $1500 since its first tests. However, it was all speculation. With the latest estimation (which seems more than attainable for the current energy market) the domestic unit is not prohibitively expensive. Skeptics among us have always expected the domestic version to become too expensive for average, middle class people to afford, but perhaps it won’t.
On a completely different note, but still related to the E-Cat development progress is Rossi’s interesting referral to the “Hot Cat”. It has been the E-Cat 600, the 600 degree E-Cat, but “Hot Cat” sounds pretty good, and its “straight from the horse’s mouth”, so to speak.