Did this guy try to scam you in some way ? Did he ask for money publicly from someone ? I ask this because to me there is a weird dissonance between what this "inventor" says and how people react. He basically said that he discovered a way to generate excess heat (there were some public demo but whatever, I was not present) and he does not want to divulge how but he will try to mass produce it. And the reactions to this: "he's a scammer, he has no patent therefore he's a scammer, oh he has a patent ? still scammer. patents prove nothing" and so on. I have no horses in this race but shouldn't we call someone a scammer AFTER he tried to scam or scammed someone and not BEFORE ? And BTW why so much passion around LENR, E-CATs, "cold fusion" and so little relaxed "I believe it when I see it" ?
Cold fusion? I'll believe it when I see it. The fact that a patent has been granted is no statement that the technology works or is in an way practical.
1. Patents that deal with producing excess energy (over-unity) (and also anti-gravity) are actually not that uncommon. There have been quite a few LENR related patents granted over the last 30 years.
2. For a heat producing over-unity device to be realistically useful it has to produce at least 3x as much energy as it consumes due to losses in the absorption and conversion process. 3x is break even.
3. For the energy industry to take interest and further develop a device, it has to at least scale to a COP of about 9-10... 3x for the conversion loss, and another 3x for an acceptable ROI (costs to bring it to market are substantial: everything from R&D to safety issues to realigning from current tech, and 100 other things).
If my memory is correct, the E-cat started with a claimed COP of 30x-100x, after a few years it was reduced to 10x-20x, and now it's reported at 3x-6x. It could go further down.
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[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 32.8 ms ] threadHere's a scam website hosting a page warning readers about other scams!
http://www.cleanseandweightloss.com/south-florida-attracts-f...
Cold fusion? I'll believe it when I see it. The fact that a patent has been granted is no statement that the technology works or is in an way practical.
See http://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/pages/US3345646-0...
1. Patents that deal with producing excess energy (over-unity) (and also anti-gravity) are actually not that uncommon. There have been quite a few LENR related patents granted over the last 30 years.
2. For a heat producing over-unity device to be realistically useful it has to produce at least 3x as much energy as it consumes due to losses in the absorption and conversion process. 3x is break even.
3. For the energy industry to take interest and further develop a device, it has to at least scale to a COP of about 9-10... 3x for the conversion loss, and another 3x for an acceptable ROI (costs to bring it to market are substantial: everything from R&D to safety issues to realigning from current tech, and 100 other things).
If my memory is correct, the E-cat started with a claimed COP of 30x-100x, after a few years it was reduced to 10x-20x, and now it's reported at 3x-6x. It could go further down.