Preorder your very own cold fusion reactor
motherboard.vice.comIf Rossi had a device that actually worked as advertised, the first thing he would do would be to set up multiple peer-reviewed demonstrations that would prove his claims in an undebatable way. As soon as incontrovertible evidence was provided, Rossi would become a media superstar, make history, and receive billions in pre-orders from all over the world. And if the physics was on Rossi's side, it would be very easy for him to provide the "extraordinary evidence" required by his extraordinary claims.
But years have passed and the validity of the E-Cat is still an open question. There have been some demonstrations, but results are still very much under discussion. There is no undebatable experimental evidence that the device works as advertised. So either Rossi prefers mystery over fame and billions, or the E-Cat a scam in some form or another.
I followed this closely 2/3 years ago, skeptical, yet very excited by the possibilities of the outcome if true. I followed the heated debates on ecatnews.com, had a lot of fun but after almost 2 years of postponing a serious test, came to the conclusion it was a scam. I'm afraid this is yet another episode of a serie that just can't die.
If I understand correctly, it's either bologna or baloney. ;-)
FWIW, I did my own research about 2 years ago on this mysterious e-cat device, and I found out there is a surprisingly rich history of unexplained effects in nickel-hydrogen systems: heat that cannot be explained by theory. I am almost convinced Rossi and the few other (competing) scientists who are studying this effect are onto something HUGE. See my post: http://blog.zorinaq.com/?e=61
Unfortunately the scientific community is very hesitant to review/reproduce the experiments because the words "cold fusion" have had an extremely bad connotation since the Pons and Fleischmann 1989 fiasco.
Scientific community would love to test his claims, except he didn't (or couldn't) tell exactly how it works.
I understand that if he actually discovered something that HUGE, he wouldn't want to tell anybody, I know I wouldn't.
But please, don't blame it on "scientific community", that's what conspiracy theorists morons say.
Rossi refuses to divulge many details, but other scientists give all information necessary to reproduce, see Piantelli's research for example.
At this point the blame fully lies on the scientific community for ignoring these.
Two groups tried to reproduce Piantelli's "discovery" and couldn't.
I still blame the conspiracy morons.
If you can reproduce it, why not revolutionize energy market and make billions? Let's hear your made up reasons why you can't.
Your attitude (aggressive tone, insults) is precisely why research is not advancing as fast as it could! You are part of the problem, not researchers who desperately work on reproducing the effect and who try to have their results taken seriously.
Also, I meant Celani, not Piantelli (sorry!). He has published a lot of information in the last 18 months, you should check it out, see:
- http://iccf18.research.missouri.edu/files/Poster/Grimshaw.pd...
- http://www.e-catworld.com/2012/08/celani-demonstrates-excess...
- http://peswiki.com/index.php/Directory:Francesco_Celani's_LE...
> Many skeptics were left unconvinced. But the customer that the E-Cat was being tested for—which Wired UK says was rumored to be the US military's DARPA—was satisfied, and purchased the unit.
This doesn't mean that DARPA is not a sceptic. It means the unit has passed the simplest test of "not a cardboard box covered in tin foil with a guy going 'Beep Boop' next to it". Now DARPA can buy a single unit and tear it apart to see if there's anything interesting there.
A £1m gamble on interesting is not much for military budgets. I don't think I'd have spent the money - it feels like a scam or a sad delusion - but maybe there's some interesting chemistry even if cold fusion isn't there.
If I were a military organization, I'd pay for the device in an escrow account with funds to be released upon validation that the device worked properly.
Even if DARPA knows that E-cat is bullshit, an act of buying an unit is an easy deception possibly diluting nuclear research resources of certain countries.
I remember watching the first E-cat "test". This is one of those things that is either an incredible breakthrough or a "the bigger the lie" type scam. The key thing to remember is that Rossi is not doing this to advance some scientific field, but to invent a product for commercial sale. To that end, any tests or data they release is not intended for rigorous scientific review, but to convince potential customers that they've got a viable product.
That being said, it definitely seems that they have some sort of energy breakthrough. Whatever fuel they have in the e-cat outputs more energy per density than any conventional fuel source. What is not clear is if this is a battery (like hydrogen) or genuine fuel source. They have been shown to produce a lot of energy over a period of several hours, but I haven't heard of any week or month long tests being conducted.
http://phys.org/news/2013-05-rossi-e-cat-energy-density-high...
What i wonder about is how this scam holds for so long being so easy to test. You attach a simple electricity meter to this and run a lightbulb for a couple weeks, and when you reach the energy spent per unit of device's mass akin to gasoline (say 10 KWh/kg), you are onto something real.
Maybe you should read the paper conducting exactly such tests, where researchers concluded the energy density is at least one magnitude above conventional sources.
It might be interesting to know that Andrea Rossi has a history with "breakthrough" discoveries and inventions.
His former company Petroldragon was disbanded after they dumped over 70.000 tons of toxic waste (and probably their method of recycling oil didn't work at all).[1 -wikipedia][2- italian source].
Most of the tests that were done violated very basic scientific rules and can be considered demonstration more than anything. The paper on arxiv.org was done by a scientist who was very close to Rossi (Giuseppe Levi) and some of its methods are questionable according to [3 - german] and [4- shorter/incomplete English version].
A real independent proof of the claims made by Rossi is still to be delivered.
While I hope that Andrea Rossi has found the next BIG thing and that he is just paranoid and incredibly bad at communicating, I seriously doubt it and go with "It's a big scam" for now. With some luck history will prove me wrong.
[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrea_Rossi_%28entrepreneur%29 [2] http://archiviostorico.corriere.it/2004/novembre/27/Riciclag... [3] http://www.psiram.com/ge/index.php/Focardi-Rossi-Energiekata... [4] http://www.psiram.com/en/index.php/Focardi-Rossi_Energy-Cata...
EDIT: Typos (at least the worst ones)
What I find amusing about this is the fact there willing to turn these things on in an unshielded environment demonstrates they know it will fail. 1MW of the cleanest fusion we know about would still kill everyone in a large room before you could blink.
PS: If it's enough power to heat a cup of coffee you needed serious shielding.
Considering it doesn't emit that much radiation, and the one it does is shielded by lead (afaik) it's ok. I've been reading about the Ecat for quite some time...at first I had my doubts...but after being peer reviewed, several tests and running in self-sustain for around 6 months... it is safe to assume it is going to work.
You can't easily block neutrons with lead. It takes some material with high content of light atoms such as hydrogen or helium. For example, polyethylene works well. And it has to be thick. Not box-sized, not even room-sized.
This is a big scam. Note that Rossi has previous experience with similar scams [1].
Note that basically any and all information on ECAT is distributed through a big spam network of SEO sites. I have been following this campaign (along with Steorn) loosely from the very begining.
All the usual telltale signs are there. The project is alway bound to be released in the next 4 months.
[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrea_Rossi_%28entrepreneur%29...
Anyone interested in the subject should read this paper describing two experiments conducted by outside researchers.
The article says that the exact nature of the reaction (e.g. the catalyzer used) remain secret. At the same time, Wikipedia claims that an Italian patent was granted for E-Cat.
However, isn't the point of the patent system that the discoveries are made public? Does this mean, since the catalyzer was apparently not patented, that someone could (independently invent and) patent it instead? Or do I understand patents and law in a wrong way?
Hacker News + science is often a very bad mix. Any evidence this is actually a fusion device, not a chemical energy converter or a brick?
As you can see from the other comments above; the jury is firmly out on that one, but it's still an interesting story considering the "secret" test customer (which Wired UK says was DARPA[1]).
[1] http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2011-10/29/rossi-success
Andrea Rossi is a scammer. You can search the full story of his previous scam on Google ( searching Petroldragon ). It should, however, spend a few more words to talk about his academic qualifications: Andrea Rossi graduated in PHILOSOPHY and has also acquired a fake degree in chemical engineering from the "Kensington University," a university-scam that was closed by court order years ago. In this fake university has "graduated" even Kim Il-Sung from North Korea ... :-)
http://news.newenergytimes.net/2012/01/11/rossi-engineering-...
An interesting article that appeared in Forbes two days ago:
http://www.forbes.com/sites/timworstall/2013/11/29/why-im-ce...
A "fan" site ! :-)
Seems like people with the appropriate qualifications have their doubts about this machine. [0] [1]
[0] http://motls.blogspot.com/2013/05/tommaso-dorigo-impressed-b... [1] http://scienceblogs.com/startswithabang/2013/05/21/the-e-cat...
I'm reading this: http://www.forbes.com/sites/markgibbs/2013/05/20/finally-ind...
How long will this keep returning? Of course the device works, with a minor glitch: it heats the water with same efficiency as any electric water heater. Because it's an electric boiler with some mumbojumbo attached. I doubt, however, that any person foolish enough to spend $1.5M on that will ever admit being fooled.
actually on the ecat.com site :"Leonardo Corp guarantees a COP of 6 for the ECAT, meaning that it takes a required 1 kW of input power to produce 6 kW of heat", which is, granted, quite an achievment.
Berkeley, California is a "nuclear free zone" as the many signs scattered around the city will announce to those that enter. I guess this machine will not be allowed for sale here.
It says you need to provide it with hydrogen. Doesn't extracting hydrogen from water require energy? How much hydrogen and nickel are required for how much output? (If it works at all)
This is really going to be an amazing decade.
How much does this reactor cost? Can't someone buy and review it, test if it works, etc.?
> How much does this reactor cost?
Household version (released in 4 months, since 2010) is supposed to cost ~2k€. 1MW version purchased by "an unknown customer" (speculated to be acutally DARPA", supposedly costed 1MM$.
> Can't someone buy and review it, test if it works, etc.?
When making a purchase you sign an NDA. So, no.
I could mention something about feeding the trolls here...
Maybe, those that skim the article, but definitely not trolling. I just don't get excitement/anger around ECat.
NDA however explains why there is no test.
You misunderstand. Rossi is the troll. Buying the device encourages him.
There's got to be a prediction market somewhere I can bet against this thing.