Has the "18 hour test" been discussed in a separate thread here?
bit.ly/fASqWa (won't let me post full URLs, that goes to nyteknik.se; article was supposedly posted today 2/23).
Claims:
* Ran for 18 hours
* Produced at least 15kw for those hours
* Raised water temp (instead of boiling it) to reduce potential source of error
Previously I thought there were three possibilities:
a) genuine article,
b) honest albeit amateurish mistakes by researchers (bad calculations, poor instrumentation, etc.), and
c) outright fraud.
I think the middle possibility has been eliminated.
Everything to me screams fraud. (If legit, why make a fake web site that is supposed to confusingly look like a journal? If legit, why make up a bogus list of "advisors" for the web site? Those things alone would generally send me looking elsewhere.) But it will be interesting to see where it goes from here.
The useful part of the article:
bit.ly/fASqWa (won't let me post full URLs, that goes to nyteknik.se; article was supposedly posted today 2/23).
Claims:
* Ran for 18 hours
* Produced at least 15kw for those hours
* Raised water temp (instead of boiling it) to reduce potential source of error
Previously I thought there were three possibilities:
a) genuine article,
b) honest albeit amateurish mistakes by researchers (bad calculations, poor instrumentation, etc.), and
c) outright fraud.
I think the middle possibility has been eliminated.
Everything to me screams fraud. (If legit, why make a fake web site that is supposed to confusingly look like a journal? If legit, why make up a bogus list of "advisors" for the web site? Those things alone would generally send me looking elsewhere.) But it will be interesting to see where it goes from here.
The useful part of the article:
“This time I opened the control unit (and examined the interior), as someone said that it could contain a hidden battery. And I can swear in court that the box was empty, except for the control electronics – five very simple PLCs – and it weighed about seven kilograms,” said Levi.
“I have also seen inside the unit itself – most of the volume is isolation, and most of the weight of about 30 kg is due to lead.”
He confirmed that the reactor supposedly containing nickel powder, the secret catalysts and hydrogen gas, had a volume of around one liter. The reactor was the only part he could not inspect.
Levi is now planning more tests and a thorough analysis, before and after operation, of the nickel powder that the energy catalyst is loaded with.
“If I then, using the most accurate methods possible, really see changes in the nuclei, then we have new physics. There is nothing you can say about it,” he stated.
Giuseppe Levi has worked with Sergio Focardi, emeritus professor at the University of Bologna and Rossi’s scientific adviser since four years.
NYT: What would you tell those who doubt your independence?
“If I were an old professor with his career already done, then I would not have anything to risk. But any attempt at fraud on my part would be a terrible personal goal. What could I hope for? To have a title for ten days, and then be thrown from my own department. Because (the matter of) fraud comes up sooner or later. There is no hope for it. So if I ... well, I would be really stupid. Honestly, I would be really stupid!” said Levi.
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