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Welcome

The Martin Fleischmann Memorial Project is a group dedicated to researching Low Energy Nuclear Reactions (often referred to as LENR) while sharing all procedures, data, and results openly online. We rely on comments from online contributors to aid us in developing our experiments and contemplating the results. We invite everyone to participate in our discussions, which take place in the comments of our experiment posts. These links can be seen along the right-hand side of this page. Please browse around and give us your feedback. We look forward to seeing you around Quantum Heat.

Join us and become part of the project. Become one of the active commenters, who question our work and suggest next steps.

Or, if you are an experimenter, talk to us about becoming an affiliated lab and doing your work in a Live Open Science manner.

In order to get where we are - we have had to make things, test things, use and abuse things. Some of these items have been featured in this blog, others have not. Some have served their time and now we want to give you a chance to help us by letting you secure a piece of history via a donation.

In a short while we will have a link on the site that will allow you to say what you would donate to secure one or more of these artefacts. This will give us a chance to recycle some funds at the same time!

Artefacts Catalogue

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0 #7 Robert Greenyer 2012-10-15 22:25
@Dave

We will be launching on a major social funding site in the next weeks.

Bob
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0 #6 Dave 2012-10-15 17:40
Have you considered using Kickstarter.com ?
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0 #5 Ecco 2012-10-15 10:41
Ah so it's not one of the wires from Celani, just pure Constantan, ok.
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0 #4 Robert Greenyer 2012-10-15 10:32
@Ecco

It is plain constantan wire.

Served its purpose.

Don't worry about the amount of wire. It is all good.

Bob
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0 #3 Ecco 2012-10-15 09:33
So, are you really scrapping this piece of Constantan wire too?
quantumheat.org/.../...

It seems like a waste to me. Couldn't it be reused for a different test? For example where you monitor only temperatures and not the electrical resistance (where the wire configuration shows its usefulness the most). It could work pretty well if you pair it with a control reactor without the active wire.

Fill gas chamber with hydrogen, apply heat, measure temperatures. The chamber containing the active wire should show excess heat if it works.

And since you don't need to wire it onto a long mica support you could use a smaller test chamber, for example by using it like this: iecdomain.com/.../

BTW, this is one of the reasons why I thought that 3 meters of treated Constantan wire weren't a lot to play with.
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0 #2 James Bryant 2012-10-14 23:11
I suggest you have a minimum donation for some of these items, as the test cells are certainly worth top dollar.
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+1 #1 James Bryant 2012-10-14 23:04
Two things.

First: the secure-a-piece- of-history is a really great idea!

Second: don't you guys ever sleep? It's seems you work seven days a week.

I truly love your dedication (applause from the audience).

Indeed what better way to lose sleep than in an endeavor that can change the entire world for the better!
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Here is your generous contributions so far towards our $500,000 target, thanks everyone! : $45,020   Please Donate
See the current state of our booked costs here