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View Full Version : New Interview w/ Ed Storms on Cold Fusion Theory



jmag0904
20th July 2014, 07:48
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S4wUUpMBdQY&feature=player_embedded

For anyone interested in the Cold Fusion-LENR saga. A brief description of our dialogue titled Nano-Cracks, Metallic Hydrogen, & Explaining LENR:

Dr. Storms is a nuclear chemist who spent thirty-four years working at Los Alamos National Labs. There he conducted research into materials for use in nuclear power and propulsion reactors, including studies of cold fusion. Ed is also the author of The Science of Low Energy Nuclear Reaction, published in 2007, and has recently published a follow-up book – The Explanation of Low Energy Nuclear Reaction (http://www.infinite-energy.com/iemagazine/issue116/stormbook.html) – exploring the theoretical side of LENR. His book can be found at Infinite-Energy.com

(http://www.infinite-energy.com/store/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=2&products_id=287)Hope you enjoy. Check out my blog Q-Niverse (http://jmag0904.wordpress.com/) and Blue-Science.org (http://www.blue-science.org/articles/) for more of my content. Or check out ColdFusionNow.org (http://coldfusionnow.org/). Thanks again for your support.

ghostrider
20th July 2014, 15:41
I wonder where he got the idea of cold fusion from ??? making metal in zero gravity ??? maybe it was from 1975 from some samples from a farmer with one arm ...

wnlight
21st July 2014, 01:34
Cold fusion sounds like a good idea to me. I suppose that a future cold fusion power plant would be to complex to keep in the back yard. So, it seems to me that this energy source would support the energy grid. Nevertheless, it would be a great replacement of fossil fuel plants. I wonder if there is a single government in the world that would allow commercial research for a cold fusion power plant to be built on their soil. They would have to protect it from US SSG operatives.

jmag0904
22nd July 2014, 03:02
Ghostrider -- Not sure what you're talking about there. Certainly creative though.

Wnlight -- I think it's a good idea as well. Ed himself has stated to me that cold fusion, in his eyes, represents a "stepping-stone" to super exotic stuff (vacuum engines, etc.), probably hundreds of years down the line. Two things can happen: It will just become part of the standard centralized grid, or it can be engineered small enough & simple enough to localize & decentralize power generation. Considering the society we currently live in, I think it will start out in big plants, and transition over to decentralized applications.