parallel wrote:
I have just seen your later post. What you do if you are trying to measure a small temperature difference is calibrate the thermocouples together in a liquid at near the desired temperature. And then check after the measurement to see if they have drifted. If you don't know something so elementary there is no point in further discussion.
I don't know what gives you that idea to talk like that about my competence, but I suggest you forward this to Rossi. They guy who tried to measure steam quality with an air humidity meter.
I don't know where we do not understand each other. IIRC, there exists a boiling water reactor design with a secondary loop for the turbines. But that is not the point. I agree, if there is no heat sink, the reservoir will not lead to further condensation. The second loop IS the heat sink. In a heat excanger, the flows of primary and secondary loop are usually inverted, so before the water goes back to the reservoir, it is in thermal contact via the HEX with the inflow of the secondary - I suppose some 20C water. So there is a lot reserve.
DancingFool wrote:
As long as the unit is run with a relatiively low COP, emergency shutoff is fairly straightforward - you just shut off the heater. This assumes no complications from thermal inertia in the reactor (and I'm not at all certain that that's a reasonable assumption), but at least it makes superficial sense.
Running the unit as a standalone generator raises the obvious question of how you would turn it off, and how to avoid thermal runaway.
It is not straightforward: only shutting down the heater might not do anything. Because the reactor would still produce a lot more heat than the heater. This is, although the heater seems to be sufficient to bring the water to boiling point. What does that tell you about the behaviour of the claimed energy catalyzer? I repeat the question that I posed to parallel (who chose to ignore it): What happens, if the pump fails? Maybe because of a power blackout (or the (unneccesary?) primary has a leakage, the HEX gets stuck...)?
What ultimately cools the device, is the water from the pump, so I do not see why controlling with a heater makes the device any safer.
I was wondering too, how the temperature is measured, but in principle it could be done by measuring the resistance of the heater. I doubt this is the case here, because developing electronics to measure the resistance of an element that is actively used as a heater, with fluctuating input, is certainly more expensive, complicated and dangerous than using an additional thermoelement. Of course, the easiest explaination is, that all we saw in previous demonstrations was an electric water boiler.
@ladajo: I completely agree.