On Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 8:24 AM, Aussie Guy E-Cat
<[email protected]>wrote:

>
> /*Initially, the temperature of the inflowing water was seven degrees
> Celsius and for a while the outlet temperature was 40 degrees Celsius. A
> flow rate of about one liter per second, equates to a peak power of 130
> kilowatts. The power output was later stabilized at 15 to 20 kilowatts.*/"
>
> 130 kWs of heat coming from something the size of a small door knob is
> really scary. No chemical source that I know of could have done that.
>

Or perhaps the flow measurement was in error --  a liter per second is a
lot of water.  Anyone remember the flow rate through the heat exchanger for
the October 28 test of the megawatt plant?  According to something I found
from Krivit, it was about 675 liters per hour.  That seems reasonable
considering the size of the tanks and pumps.

But that's only about 11 liters/minute or 0.2 liters/second.  So if I
understand this right and someone please correct me if I'm wrong (I'm only
on my first cup of coffee), Levi claims to have run 1 liter per second
through a tiny E-cat test system while Rossi only ran 0.2 liters/second
through the MEGAWATT device?   Does that make sense to anyone?  I suspect
Levi's measurement of 130 kW from the small machine, which indeed would be
scary, was an error in flow measurement.  A big one.  Unfortunately we
can't examine that test because LEVI WON'T PROVIDE or discuss the raw data!

Of course the OBVIOUS question is always (forgive the repetition but it
seems a lof of  people forget it) is why Levi didn't repeat that
excellently planned and poorly recorded and calibrated test.

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