Horace wrote: ↑Sat Apr 08, 2017 6:18 pm
Is Randall Mill's Hydrino the c-Hydrogen ?
Yes. Well, almost...
Horace wrote: ↑Sat Apr 08, 2017 6:18 pm
Addition of what motion can convert the m-Hydrogen to c-Hydrogen ?
In Mill's apparatus he clams that it is a collision of m-Hydrogen with an Acceptor: a Lithium atom or a Potassium atom or a monomolecular isolated H
2O molecule. Does this make sense?
A big mistake made by conventional science that Larson cleared up is that hydrogen is NOT an atom--it is a compound particle (proton + neutrino). Atomic number 1 is actually deuterium, with two double-rotating systems.
So don't look as hydrogen as atomic, but simply as a proton. All that is needed is to
accelerate the proton beyond the unit speed boundary and it inverts to the cosmic form of the same particle (as do all particles--but not atoms).
The "rotational datum" (where rotation rotates all the way back to the start) for particles is 2 units, since particles can never have a displacement higher than 1. (It is 4 for atomic magnetic and 8 for atomic electric), so:
In order to convert displacements for a motion that crosses the unit speed boundary, you just subtract the rotational datum from the particle:
m-proton - datum = c-proton
1-1-(1) - 2-2-(2) = (1)-(1)-1
(Remember this is "displacement math" form, so (1) - (2) = 1; the parenthesis are symbols of spatial displacement, not negation, so a negative result means you flip aspects.)
The production of these c-protons probably have nothing to do with chemistry--the accelerations used to create those "collisions" are causing protons to cross over the unit speed boundary and switch to a cosmic structure.
NOTE: this is NOTHING NEW. Nature does it all the time and was documented in the early 1900s by Viktor Schauberger under the term "living water." This SAME concept was later promoted by "Joe" of Australia as the "Joe Cell," a functional device that used living water as a source of c-protons to run a combustion engine. (Joe's unique contribution was that his "cells" were self-running at the "seeding" stage.) This was later rediscovered by Yule Brown as "Brown's Gas," then by a Japanese researcher labeling it as "Ohmasa's Gas," and most recently is being billed as "HHO."
So this company is just re-branding old ideas as something "new," most likely to secure patents for the process--without understanding it, but with sufficient data to block any future research into c-proton based technology via patent infringement claims. They may actually get to a device, but as soon as they do, Big Energy will buy them out and lock everything up, and send hordes of drooling lawyers at anyone that attempts to develop similar tech. After all, that is the
modus operandi these days.