Hasn't it?adam2 wrote: Cheap fusion power would do it, but it has not been invented yet.
National Instruments a major US company certainly thinks were on to something (add them to the ever increasing list of major companies taking LENR seriously).
http://www.e-catworld.com/2012/08/niwee ... -featured/
At this confrence the following demonstration was presented for all to see (5000 attendees) by Francesco Celian which national instruments also assisted with and measured the results with there own equipment.
http://blog.newenergytimes.com/2012/08/ ... struments/
(a detailed report of the reactor and excess heat measurments can be found here http://www.22passi.it/downloads/PresICCF17_NewA3A.pdf this was presented after the above article was published)
There was 20-14 W excess thermal energy, as
measured outside the entire device by
radiactive exchange.
Granted a average of 10watts excess isn't much and by no means prove commercialisation is possible but this was just a simple scientific demo/experiment for the public which was run for 55 hours at the NI confrence and most importantly it was a controlled and stable demo and was sponsered by a major US company who is "deeply involved" in the LENR field.
Them being deeply involved says alot there not going to sponsor and back a field and thus take it serious (especially a field so ridiculed as cold fusion) unless there pretty confident in the field.
Incidentily NI started to get involved in the field of LENR after being im contact and meeting (which they confirmed them selves) one Andrea Rossi. I am by no means saying that proves Rossi has anything but it is a rather interesting coincidence. Did they see something that made them take note?
I reccomend reading the detailed report on the demo as that will (should) answer any questions the skeptics on here will undoubtely have.
Let the LENR bashing commence!