P,
You may know instrumentation, but apparently (just like all the Rossibots), you do not get the critical significance of this and how it defines complete failure by Rossi on this run:
They assume all the output water is vaporised (and does not recondense on any surface in thermal contact with the reactor).
They note the output temperature as always staying within a small range of 100C.
They describe the probe used to test water in the output steam.
This analysis of the experiment is flawed, and shows that they have no expertise in required area.
(1) It is well known that phase change calorimetry is extremely diffciult to make reliable, because of problems ensuring that all the water in steam is water vapour.
(2) The fact that output temperature sticks at 100C would indicate to any thinking person the strong likelihood that water remains in the output - otherwise very small increments of power would increase the temperature well abouve 100C.
If there was no water in the output (100% vaporized), then the temp would go above the phase change point (boiling temp). Once full Latent Heat has been absorbed, now you are in superheat. By running the device in the latent heat zone, it means that
full vaporization DID NOT OCCUR. If full vaporization did not occur, then the power calculations must be wrong. In addition, it is also a major clue that
full vaporization DID NOT OCCUR when one considers the 1600 to 1 expansion volume of water to steam, and then looks at how much steam was coming out.
So one certainty: output temp stayed at the boiling point, and one big clue: not enough steam flow, means there is no way the water was fully cooked, and thus the calculations were wrong.
Oh, by the way, another clue: dry steam is invisible. The steam exiting the tube was visible. Dry steam would exit, and the flow would travel a bit before you would see any atmospheric moisture effect. How far is a function of superheat, flow rate, and, go figure, atmospheric moisture content.
Rossi's major flaw, that E & K also seemed to do, was to assume and take credit for the energy gain of full Latent Heat of Vaporization. This was a major flaw in defining how much energy was produced.
The development of atomic power, though it could confer unimaginable blessings on mankind, is something that is dreaded by the owners of coal mines and oil wells. (Hazlitt)
What I want to do is to look up C. . . . I call him the Forgotten Man. (Sumner)