Sorry, his posts have been the only place I have heard it.Giorgio wrote:You really do not like me if you think that I can use Axil as a sourceKitemanSA wrote: According to Axil? Any other source?.
(Itself?) Well I guess I have to take your word for it since I don't speak Italian, no wait, I'm not supposed to take...Then he wrote: This was stated by Rossi itself in one of his first TV interview. I missed it the first time I heard it but I catch it back a few weeks later while viewing it again.

This is somewhat strange since his US Patent application states copper walls.
Does it NECESSARILY follow that the heat is deposited in the reactor chamber? High energy carriers often pass thru a lot of stuff before depositing the energy.Then he wrote:This was also mentioned by Rossi many times (that the reactor chamber was sealed) but you can get to it also by logic.KitemanSA wrote:Source?Then he wrote:The water flows only outside and only gets in contact with the external walls of the reactor chamber.
They are putting Hydrogen gas inside the reaction chamber and sealing off the valves. If water was allowed to enter the chamber the hydrogen will flow outside immediately.
My question was more like the above, does it NECESSARILY follow that the heat is deposited in the reactor chamber and not further out. After all, in the USPatent, the chamber was bathed in boron or borated water so if the energy is coming out as neutrons, it would be deposited there, OUTSIDE the chamber, not in the reactor itself. Similarly, HRE and UV may pass thru the Ni, thru the walls of the Ni chamber (reactor chamber) and deposit their energy in a structure past a water bath.Then he wrote:Well, if you have a hot side the thermal gradient will move toward the cold side. Or maybe I am not understanding your doubt.KitemanSA wrote:Assumption? Where did this come from?Then he wrote: Hence the thermal flow goes from the inside (MaxT) to the outside wall of the reactor chamber (MaxT-dT).
Again, if the heat is deposited outside the chamber in the boron or lead walls, the chamber may very well be thermally protected by water between the chamber and the heat deposit location.Then he wrote:Oh come one, magnets are immersed into a cooling medium. Do you see any in the Rossi reactor? You can't really bring this as a counter argument.KitemanSA wrote:Geez I hope you can or Polywell will NEVER work with superconducting magnets.Then he wrote: According Rossi you can get steam up to 500'C, hence the reactor temperature cannot be lower than that.
No, but neither have I found any indication of such temperature sensitivity yet. The frequency is said to be Tsensitive. Haven't found anything else YET.Then he wrote:Yes, I am going by memory. As I said need to research it back.KitemanSA wrote:Source? Please? Is this the same folk you mentioned earlier?Then he wrote: Just for sake of reasoning I reduced it to 300-400'C, but even 100'C will give you issues on maintaining a coherent oscillation of the Ni Lattice.
But you can give me some source stating the opposite meantime