Good news on the OU front...
The Moller Atomic Hydrogen Generator (MAHG), mentioned several
times in the past, is based on the Irving Langmuir Torch, which
may have been the very first documented OU device, despite
Langmuir's later 'pathological,' and most regrettable doubletalk.
In the MAHG, hydrogen is dissociated at low voltage electrically
and recombined at overunity thermally. An important but
controversial finding - here by Naudin and by several others, is a
robust COP... now over 2.5 at decent 500 watt power gain -
consequently, this is looking good for immediate commercial
development - plus the H2 is not consumed but can be recycled over
and over again without consuming much more hydrogen than the
quantity used to start with.
The mechanism is probably related to the hydrino, but not only
precedes BLP but perhaps supercedes the hydrino work, as well. The
Mills' experimental phenomena may be a subset of this or vice
versa, who knows. The Moller cathode is typically tungsten, not a
typical Mills' catalyst, although as stated before, Mills is now
trying to claim about half the periodic table. Here is the new
tests on the JLN site:
http://jlnlabs.imars.com/mahg/tests/index.htm
As a proto-theory of this which has been put forward several times
on vortex in generalities, most recently last week - is that there
seems to be a simple "bare proton" pathway for OU - it is an idea
which is seen in the Chernitski tube and many other devices. I
re-float the idea on vortex from time-to-time as a hypothetical
way that one can cohere the mass-energy of ZPE in the form of a
3.4 eV base "entity" of mass/charge (photon or light lepton)
which can be cohered from Dirac's sea. The 3.4 eV entity is best
known as both the half-ionization potential energy of positronium
(the major component of the Dirac sea interface) and/or the best
estimate for mass of the electron anti-neutrino. It is probably
related to both phenomena. Whatever "it" is, "it" is attracted to
a "bare" proton. Where is Clinton when you need an expert in
doublespeak?
At a COP of 2.5+ (see run 29) the Moller unit tested by Naudin is
not all that far from becoming self-powered, as the
heat-to-electric efficiency of small turbines is about 25%. If
this excess heat can be pushed to a COP of about 4 or thereabouts,
or some more efficient direct conversion method implemented - then
a self-powered device will be possible.
That experiment - if and when it occurs - will be as important, if
not more so, than the discovery of nuclear energy... no kidding.
Off the record, this may happen soon...so the eternal optimist is
now looking for a discount flight to Switzerland.... ;-)
Jones