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Author Topic: Info on cold fusion  (Read 13840 times)

buzneg

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Info on cold fusion
« on: March 28, 2007, 09:37:30 AM »
Post it here

video of the discovery and ignorance of the scientific community (those fuckers :P)
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=2229511748333360205&hl=en
or
http://biogenesislab.blogspot.com/

from some interview on link below here someone being interviewed said he's done cold fusion with:
-2 Canadian nickels spaced at least 6 inches apart
-Arm and hammer washing soda in the water solution
-and at least 24 volts
And that will yeild 24% extra power he says, and if you do it with gold it will yeild 200%.
I know that not all Canadian nickels are the same, because the ones made sometime in the 1980's are not magnetic, but all the other years are. So he may have had a combination of those.

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/hostpage.aspx?show_id=14888

post info here to help other lookers.

hartiberlin

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Re: Info on cold fusion
« Reply #1 on: March 28, 2007, 11:29:33 AM »
Post it here

video of the discovery and ignorance of the scientific community (those fuckers :P)
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=2229511748333360205&hl=en


Nice video !
What has happened with the Patterson Power cell with his beads ?

When I remember Motorola bought the technology.

Is somebody here from Motorola and can post some more recent infos,
what is going on at Motorola with it ?
Will they soon have some products to market ?

We really need better new materials, which do not
burn up in the process, so the Patterson beads were quite fascinating,
cause it worked at low temperatures...

Please post more infos, if you have some friends working at Motorola.
Many thanks.

Regards, Stefan.

buzneg

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Re: Info on cold fusion
« Reply #2 on: March 28, 2007, 10:09:29 PM »
here's the link to PESwiki's cold fusion page.

http://www.freeenergynews.com/Directory/ColdFusion/index.html


kewlhead

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Re: Info on cold fusion
« Reply #4 on: March 31, 2007, 04:05:45 AM »
Im not sure if this allowed or not...if not pleases excuse me but have this link for a DVD you may or may not know about...I havent seen it....does anyone here reccomend it?

http://www.aetherometry.com/bookstore/DVD0001.html

buzneg

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Re: Info on cold fusion
« Reply #5 on: March 31, 2007, 07:31:38 AM »
Some students have achieved plasma fusion, but so far it takes more energy then it puts out. I haven't seen that movie.

http://discovermagazine.com/2007/mar/radioactive-boy-scout


kewlhead

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Re: Info on cold fusion
« Reply #6 on: April 01, 2007, 08:00:08 PM »
I have just started to study some cold fussion stuff and really dont understand alot of it.The nuclear side of things gets to be hard to sipher.I like the water side of things and study that alot.Thers something about super heated steam ( 500 F) and radiation spontaniously dissociating the water that's interesting.
One guy doing cold fussion type of things is Eckels and his WO /00/25320 patent is interesting.My favorite is from page 32.
One day cold fussion may be as common as a light bulb...who knows....lol


hansvonlieven

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Re: Info on cold fusion
« Reply #8 on: September 13, 2007, 11:21:10 AM »
In another thread I posted this:

G'day all,

The article below was posted on the newsgroup; sci.physics. fusion.

If someone has some palladium wire around and access to
some hydrogen this would be a simple experiment.

"Cold Fusion
The theory of cold fusion is that when hydrogen is adsorbed into
palladium
metal the hydrogen atoms get mixed with the electron "gas" in the
metal so
that the protons are able to pack close together so that meson
tunnelling
occurred. This makes a proton-proton atom (it is at a lower energy
level
than two separated protons) which then emits a positron to form
deuterium
which sits at a lower energy level level than the two hydrogen nuclei
it
came from.

The deuterons fuse in a similar way to form helium at a lower energy
again.

The positrons emitted combine with electrons emitting two gamma
photons at
the annihilation frequency the recoil of the nuclei formed make the
reaction
hot and some gamma photons escape.

If you put hydrogen in a tube with palladium filament suspended
inside after
a few days the filament glows red hot and after a while goes white
hot and
makes a very good lamp.

If I recall, I did this experiment at a government lab, somewhere in
England
in about 1969. I was severely punished for my invention and put on
routine
test work.

They said my invention was "strategic" and I should say nothing for
thirty
years.

Times up!

Chris."



Let's see what comes out of this one

Hans von Lieven





What do you guys think about this, and it is all done without the use of Deuterium.

Hans von Lieven

buzneg

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Re: Info on cold fusion
« Reply #9 on: September 14, 2007, 12:19:33 AM »
at 20:30 into this video, a professor describes his unit at the University of Utah. It seems the palladium chathode, and dueterium is the important parts. I think the dueterium may just speed up the process.

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-5820042344911746802&q=cold+fusion&total=1684&start=10&num=10&so=0&type=search&plindex=1

I'm very confused with what the chathode is now. In wiki it shows a picture with a positive sign, and electrons flowing from it, does that mean that the positive side of a battery is negatively charged?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cathode

keithturtle

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Re: Info on cold fusion
« Reply #10 on: September 15, 2007, 07:59:54 AM »
I don't have much faith in Pons/ Fleischmann flavored CF.   There was jes too much shabby science in their approach.   Where's the replication?

The plasma phenomenon oughta be tested for He, for that would validate actual "fusion".   Apart from that, I'll be content to reap the heat outa the reactor, calling it "whatever".

Turtle

therealrasta

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Re: Info on cold fusion
« Reply #11 on: August 15, 2010, 08:14:09 PM »
In another thread I posted this:

G'day all,

The article below was posted on the newsgroup; sci.physics. fusion.

If someone has some palladium wire around and access to
some hydrogen this would be a simple experiment.

"Cold Fusion
The theory of cold fusion is that when hydrogen is adsorbed into
palladium
metal the hydrogen atoms get mixed with the electron "gas" in the
metal so
that the protons are able to pack close together so that meson
tunnelling
occurred. This makes a proton-proton atom (it is at a lower energy
level
than two separated protons) which then emits a positron to form
deuterium
which sits at a lower energy level level than the two hydrogen nuclei
it
came from.

The deuterons fuse in a similar way to form helium at a lower energy
again.

The positrons emitted combine with electrons emitting two gamma
photons at
the annihilation frequency the recoil of the nuclei formed make the
reaction
hot and some gamma photons escape.

If you put hydrogen in a tube with palladium filament suspended
inside after
a few days the filament glows red hot and after a while goes white
hot and
makes a very good lamp.

If I recall, I did this experiment at a government lab, somewhere in
England
in about 1969. I was severely punished for my invention and put on
routine
test work.

They said my invention was "strategic" and I should say nothing for
thirty
years.

Times up!

Chris."



Let's see what comes out of this one

Hans von Lieven





What do you guys think about this, and it is all done without the use of Deuterium.

Hans von Lieven

So, its been 30 years.. That sounds like it would be a great source of power. I am wondering why you have not tried playing around with this idea and concept further.