Return to the INE Main Page

Dear Friend,

Welcome to the best source of information on cold fusion in the world!

Please browse this collection of materials --our magazine, video tapes, etc.-- and decide which items best suit your needs. You will be amazed at how much progress has been made in this exciting field. Take nothing for granted. Go to the original sources of information presented here. See for yourself!

Thank you, in advance, for your order...

Sincerely,

Eugene F. Mallove, Sc.D.
Editor-in-Chief and Publisher
INFINITE ENERGY: Cold Fusion and New Energy Technology (MAGAZINE)

Cold Fusion Technology
P.O. Box 2816
Concord, NH 03302-2816

Tel: 603-228-4516
Fax: 603-224-5975


Infinite Energy Magazine - Guide to Past Issues:

www.infinite-energy.com/iemagazine/backissguide.html

As a service to our subscribers and browsers on the World Wide Web we provide the following information about the contents of past issues of Infinite Energy Magazine. The Volume Details area provides a concise overview of the issues in each volume of Infinite Energy Magazine. The highlights for each issues are listed there. The Table of Contents area includes the ENTIRE table of contents for each issue, and is thus more useful when looking for a specific article, feature or column.


Infinite Energy Magazine, Frequently Asked Questions:

www.infinite-energy.com/resources/faq.html

Our Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ's) page includes questions and answers pertaining to the subjects of Cold Fusion and New Energy Technologies. If you are new to this field you may find the following information particularly useful. We continue to review and modify this page to include responses to common questions from visitors. If you have a question, and the answer isn't there, ask us and we'll try to answer it.


QUESTION: Can you really afford to be without the latest information on Cold Fusion and New Energy technology?

* You are a curious and concerned citizen who wonders about "the rest of the story," the continuing revolutionary developments world-wide, which most journalists have not kept up with since the furor in Utah in the spring of 1989.

* You are an engineer, scientist, technician, or inventor and want to know the truth about these claimed new energy sources. Perhaps you want to build your own systems.

* You are a concerned environmentalist or a person working in another area of alternative energy. You are a *hot* fusion researcher who wonders whether the grass is greener on the other side of the fence (it is)!

* You are wondering about your investment portfolio or your career-how they will be affected by imminent developments in Cold Fusion and New Energy Technology.

For all these reasons -and more- you need to get the facts Now!


**********************************ORDER FORM********************************************

COLUMN-1                                COLUMN-2
*U.S./Canada Mailing                    *Other Foreign Mailings

(PRICES INCLUDE SHIPPING)

One year subscription to INFINITE ENERGY Magazine (6 issues)
$29.95_________(U.S./Canada)            $49.95________(Other Foreign)
(Beginning with premier Issue, March/April 1995, back issues always in stock )

Video Tapes (2) of Dr. Eugene Mallove's Cold Fusion/New Energy Briefing
December 10, 1995, Rutgers University (2-3 hours)
$49.95_________(U.S./Canada)            $64.95________(Other Foreign)

Video Tapes (4) Cold Fusion/New Energy Symposium, Jan. 20, 1996
at Cambridge Marriott Hotel, Massachusetts
$99.95_________(U.S./Canada)            $124.95_______(Other Foreign)

Video Tapes (4) of MIT Cold Fusion Day 1995 (8 hours)
$84.95_________(U.S./Canada)            $109.95_______(Other Foreign)

Single tapes from MIT Cold Fusion Day-1995
$28.00_________(U.S./Canada)            $35.00________(Other Foreign)

ICCF5 Video Tapes (4) - Fifth International Conference on Cold Fusion
$210.00________(U.S./Canada)            $230.00_______(Other Foreign)

(Highlights of ICCF5 - over 8 hours of presentations! Included extra: *all abstracts* and an index of participants.)

Fire from Ice (Book inscribed by author)
$25.95_________(U.S./Canada)            $29.95________(Other Foreign)


TOTAL = __________(U.S./Canada)       TOTAL = ________(Other Foreign)

Please enclose check or money order to Cold Fusion Technology,
or enter Credit Card information:

Cold Fusion Technology
P.O. Box 2816 Concord
NH 03302-2816 USA

Name:_________________________________________________________________________
For Infinite Energy:  Please start with issue #_____1, #_____2, #_____3 etc...
Address:______________________________________________________________________
Address:______________________________________________________________________
City:_______________________________State:__________ Postal Code/Zip:_________
Country:____________________________
Phone:______________________________
Fax:________________________________

Optional: E-Mail address:_____________________________________________________

If using Credit Card:

Check one: Master Card _____ VISA _____ American Express _____
Card Number:__________________________________________________
Expirations Date:_____________________________________________
Signature:____________________________________________________
(only if by snail mail, not needed if e-mail)

Phone: 603-228-4516
Fax:   603-224-5975

E-mail: INTERNET: 76570.2270@compuserve.com

--- Announcing a new magazine..................................

INFINITE ENERGY
- Cold Fusion and New Energy Technology

(ISSN 1081-6372)

Eugene F. Mallove, Sc.D., Editor-in-Chief

INFINITE ENERGY premiered with the March/April 1995 issue, which was distributed to the participants of the Fifth International Conference on Cold Fusion (ICCF5) to be held in Monte Carlo, Monaco (April 9-13, 1995). Issue # 2 (May/June) appeared in mid-late June 1995. [See Table of Contents below.] Issue #3 and #4 were published in 1995. Issues #5 and #6 was published as a Special Double Issue (120 pages!) in late March 1996 (the 7th anniversary of cold fusion) following our magazine's Cold Fusion and New Energy Symposium at the Cambridge Marriott hotel on January 20, 1996. This is a bombshell issue NOT TO BE MISSED. Cold fusion has gone commercial in a BIG WAY!

INFINITE ENERGY is an international technical magazine with outreach to the general public as well. It is written at the technical level of Scientific American or Science News. To maintain the highest editorial standards, it is written and edited by scientists, engineers, and expert journalists. It is aimed at pioneering scientists, engineers, industrialists, and investors who are entering an exciting new R&D area. This continues to grow explosively, with significant involvement by Japanese corporations and an increasing number of U.S. companies. New technology developments and scientific discoveries are being made monthly and reported in the peer-reviewed scientific literature. INFINITE ENERGY reports on the latest information that is now pouring in from research centers around the globe.

The affordable subscription price of this six-issues/year publication of general and technical interest is $29.95 for residents of the U.S. and Canada. (To cover first-class air mail for other countries, the annual foreign subscription price is $49.95.) The magazine initially has limited distribution on select newsstands and is subscription-driven via a national ad campaign. (Later in 1995, newsstand sales distribution will increase.)

To subscribe to INFINITE ENERGY in 1995, beginning with the premier issue, please enclose check or money order to Cold Fusion Technology, or enter Credit Card information:

Cold Fusion Technology
P.O. Box 2816
Concord, NH 03302-2816 USA

Name:_________________________________________________________________________
For Infinite Energy:  Please start with issue #_____1, #_____2, #_____3 etc...
Address:______________________________________________________________________
Address:______________________________________________________________________
City:_______________________________State:__________ Postal Code/Zip:_________
Country:____________________________
Phone:______________________________
Fax:________________________________

Optional: E-Mail address:_____________________________________________________

If using Credit Card:

Check one: Master Card _____ VISA _____ American Express _____
Card Number:__________________________________________________
Expirations Date:_____________________________________________
Signature:____________________________________________________
(only if by snail mail, not needed if e-mail)

Editorial contributions are requested and advertising space is available.

Phone: 603-228-4516
Fax: 603-224-5975

E-mail: INTERNET: 76570.2270@compuserve.com

TABLE OF CONTENTS OF INFINITE ENERGY MAGAZINE


--------------------------------------------------------------------
Table of Contents for INFINITE ENERGY Vol. 1 , No. 1, April/May 1995
--------------------------------------------------------------------

ICCF5 Program
Welcome by Arthur C. Clarke                    1

Breaking Through, Editorial                    3

Letters                                        5

Remembering Julian Schwinger
Eugene F. Mallove                              9

Cold Fusion Theory: A Brief History of Mine
Julian Schwinger                              10

Very Hot Cold Fusion in Japan:
Jed Rothwell                                  14

Cell Testing at Clean Energy Technologies
Bruce Klein and Dennis Cravens                18

COMMENTARY

Cold Fusion: From Reasons to Doubt
   to Reasons to Believe
Edmund Storms                                 23

Why Technology First
Peter Glueck                                  26

The Energy Crisis
Geoff Rohde                                   30

A Warm Welcome to Infinite Energy
Hal Fox                                       31

The Dawning of the New Energy Age
Andrew Rothovius                              31

A "Micro-fusion" Reactor:
Nuclear Reactions "in the cold"
   by ultrasonic cavitation
Tom Benson                                    33

EXPERIMENTER'S CORNER

From a Sea of Water to a Sea of Energy
Michael T. Huffman                            38

Thermocouple Hints                            45

EarthTech International Resources             45

Calendar                                      45
Cold Fusion in a "Ying Cell" and Probab-
   ility Enhancement by Boson Stimulation
Nelson Ying and Charles W. Shults III         46

Japan TV Program Magnetism Revelation         48

Washington Watch                              50

------------------------------------------------------------------
Table of Contents for INFINITE ENERGY Vol. 1, No. 2, May/June 1995
------------------------------------------------------------------

Breaking Through, Editorial                    3

Letters                                        5

The Fifth International Conference
   on Cold Fusion (ICCF5)-Highlights
Jed Rothwell                                   7

ICCF5 Participating Organizations
Akira Kawasaki                                17

Flowing Electrolyte Calorimetry
Dennis Cravens                                18

Comments on Dr. Cravens' Work
Jed Rothwell                                  22

A Development Approach for Cold Fusion
Bruce Klein                                   27

Alchemy Nightmare:  Skeptic Finds Heavy
   Element Transmutation in Experiment
Eugene Mallove                                30

Energy Bombshell from Moldova-SPECIAL REPORT
Water Fuel Device Conquers the Marketplace
Christopher P. Tinsley                        33

On One of the Energy Generation Mechanisms
   in Unitary Quantum Mechanics
Lev G. Sapogin                                38

Magnetic Resonance Amplifier Controversy
Norman Wootan, Hal Puthoff                    40

COMMENTARY

Cold Fusion in 2001 and Beyond:
   Lessons from High Tech
Robert W. Horst                               44

Proposal for Designing a Cold Fusion Reactor
   and its Commercialization
Lev G. Sapogin                                47

PATENT FILE
The MIT Cold Fusion Patent #5,411,654

EXPERIMENTER'S CORNER

Self-Heated Pd Wire in H2/D2: Nuclear
Effects?
M. Srinivasan et al                           50

Briefs                                        52

Calendar                                      46

Washington Watch                              54


---------------------------------------------------------------------
Table of Contents for Infinite Energy Vol. 1, No. 3, July/August 1995
---------------------------------------------------------------------

Breaking Through, Editorial                    3

Letters                                        5

Low-Energy Transmutation Conference
   at Texas A&M
Hal Fox                                        8

Application of the Nucleon Cluster Model to
   Experimental Results
Ronald A. Brightsen, Randy Davis              13

Excess Heat in Cavitation Devices:
   Worldwide Testing and Reports
Scott Little, Jeff Driscoll,
   Eugene Mallove, et al                      16

Recent Scientific Abstracts of Note           33

Mechanisms of a Disobedient Science
David Moon                                    34

Briefs                                        42

Washington Watch                              43

Calendar                                      44

Hypothesis for Cold Fusion of Hydrogen
   Isotopes Within Metal Matrices
Marshall Dudley                               45

COMMENTARY
How to Miss the Energy Boat
Hal Fox                                       46

NEW PRODUCTS
JET Technology; Nova Resources Group          47


EXPERIMENTER'S CORNER
Cold Fusion: A Study Involving the
   Fusion of Ions
Michael Belcher                               48

Table-Top Sonoluminescence
Scott Little                                  51

REVIEW
"A Dialogue on Chemically Induced
   Nuclear Effects"
Jed Rothwell                                  ?

A Brief History of a Book
Eugene Mallove                               58


--------------------------------------------------------------------
Table of Contents for Infinite Energy Vol. 1, No. 4, Sept./Oct. 1995
--------------------------------------------------------------------

Breaking Through, Editorial                   3

Letters                                       5

Pons & Fleischmann
   Patent to be Approved in Europe            6

80-to-1 Cold Fusion Demo at HF Meeting!
Jed Rothwell                                  8

Dr. Mizuno's Solid-State Cold Fusion
   (Technical Paper)
Tadahiko Mizuno, et al                        9

Briefs                                       12

FEATURES

Can Cold Fusion Be Catalyzed by
   Fractionally Charged Ions?
Joseph L . McKibben                          14

The Piantelli Patent
F. Piantelli, et al                          24

ICCF5 Talk by Dr. Edmund Storms              32

Magnetic Motor- U.S. #5,436,518              40

New Products - Acoustic Levitation
Dr. David Deak                               42

Calendar                                     46

Washington Watch                             48

COMMENTARY

The New Scientific Age
Dr. Brian O'Leary                            49

What's All the Static?
Jeffery Kooistra                             51

Vision 2020 "Cold Fusion"
Dr. M. Srinivasan                            52

Review:  "Too Close to the Sun"
   (CBC/BBC Cold Fusion Documentary)
David Moon                                   53

Nucleon Cluster Structures
Ronald Brightsen                             55

Potapov's Thermogenerator - Update
Translations, Christopher Bird               56


VIDEO TAPES OF THE ** MIT IAP COLD FUSION DAY ** - January 21, 1995
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
ARE NOW AVAILABLE.


Four (4) two-hour VHS video tapes are available as a set, or individually, which were only slightly edited from professionally taken video footage of the day-long IAP Cold Fusion session at MIT on January 21, 1995.

The tapes include the following material:

***** TAPE#1 *****

Dr. Eugene F. Mallove (Cold Fusion Technology, Concord, NH)
"Cold Fusion and New Energy Technology - An Overview"

Dr. Peter Graneau (Northeastern University
Center for Electromagnetic Research)
"Anomalous Forces in Water Plasma Explosions"

***** TAPE#2 *****

Buford ("Ray") Conley (MIT, graduate student, Dept. of Aero/Astro Eng.)
"Light Water Excess Heat Experiments"

Fred Jaeger (ENECO, Salt Lake City)
"Patents and Commercialization"

Professor Peter L. Hagelstein (MIT Dept. of EE&CS)
"Cold Fusion: What We Know and What We Don't Know"

***** TAPE#3 *****

Professor Peter Hagelstein - (CONTINUED from TAPE #2)
"Cold Fusion: What We Know and What We Don't Know" (Continued)

Professor Keith Johnson (MIT Dept. of Materials Science and Eng.)
"Progress in the Theory of Excess Heat"
*and* *Excess Heat* - The Movie, now being made by Hollywood!

James L. Griggs (Hydro Dynamics, Inc., Rome, Georgia, USA)
"The Hydrosonic Pump: Excess Power and Other Effects"

***** TAPE#4 *****

Bertil Werjefelt (PolyTech(USA), Hawaii)
"Energy from Magnetic Materials and Magnetic Fields"

Dr. Eugene F. Mallove
Concluding Remarks

The tapes include the speakers' presentations as well as question and answer sessions. There is footage of the Hydrosonic Pump under test as well as close-up footage of rotor surface melting effects. Bertil Werjefelt shows footage of experiments in his own laboratory. There are scenes of Japanese researchers from Sumitomo, Hitachi, and other companies and universities now involved in their claimed extraction of energy from magnetic materials.

These efforts are now said by these researchers to be proceding toward commercialization.

Actual experiments are seen in progress.


The tapes are VHS cassettes in NTSC format and range from 120 to 127 mintues each.

To Order the *full set* of four, two-hour tapes, please send check or money order to Cold Fusion Technology for $79.95 plus $5.00 shipping and packing, within U.S. and Canada.

[For foreign orders, please replace the $5.00 shipping fee with computed postage for a 1.10 kilogram package - specify air or surface.]


To Order *individual tapes*, please specify which tape(s). Please send check or money order for $25.00/tape, plus $3.00 shipping and packing if only one tape, or $5.00 total if more than one tape.

Tapes are Copyright 1995, Cold Fusion Technology

Please send payments to:

Cold Fusion Technology
P.O. Box 2816
Concord, NH 03302-2816

Fax: 603-224-5975
Phone: 603-228-4516
E-Mail: INTERNET:76570.2270@compuserve.com


ICCF5 VIDEO TAPES NOW AVAILABLE!

Experience the excitement of scientific history in the making...

Witness key scientific and commercial presentations at the Fifth International Conference on Cold Fusion (ICCF5), Monte Carlo, Monaco,
At the elegant Hotel Loews, 9-13 April 1995.

Cold Fusion Technology presents some of the most significant presentations in a set of four (4) video tapes (approximately 8-hours total view time). The scientific slides presented by the speakers are clearly visible. Tape format is standard VHS (with U.S. NTSC recording format-may be converted by purchaser to PAL or other formats). Tapes are Copyright 1995 Cold Fusion Technology. PRICE: only US $210 for U.S. and Canada; only US $230 for other foreign. Price includes first-class air mail. ADDED VALUE: A full set of ICCF5 scientific abstracts, as well as an index of participants is included with each tape set.

Order today! Send check or money order (US funds) to: Cold Fusion Technology, P.O. Box 2816, Concord, New Hampshire 03302-2816 USA.
Or, provide credit card information (Master Card, VISA, AMEX).FAX: 603-224-5975


One Kilowatt Cold Fusion Reactor Demonstrated (December 5-7, 1995)

by Jed Rothwell, Contributing Editor, Infinite Energy Magazine

Last week, at the Power-Gen '95 Americas power industry trade show in Anaheim, a 1-kilowatt cold fusion reactor was demonstrated by Clean Energy Technologies, Inc. (CETI) of Dallas Texas. It is a thin film light water electrolytic cold fusion reactor. The cathode is composed of thousands of 1 mm diameter co-polymer beads with a flash coat of copper and multiple layers of electrolytically deposited thin film nickel and palladium. The beads are covered by three U.S. patents, with additional patents pending. During this demonstration, between 0.1 and 1.5 watts of electricity was input, and the cell output 450 to 1,300 watts of heat. CETI previously demonstrated smaller cold fusion cells. In April, at the Fifth International Conference on Cold Fusion (ICCF5) they demonstrated input of 0.14 watts and a peak excess of 2.5 watts, a ratio of 1:18. In October, at the 16th biannual Symposium on Fusion Engineering (SOFE '95) they demonstrated a cell with 0.06 watts input and 5 watts peak output, a ratio of 1:83. Ratios at Power-Gen ranged from 1:1000 to 1:4000.

The ICCF5 and Power-Gen calorimeters were designed and constructed by Dennis Cravens. The SOFE '95 calorimeter was constructed by George Miley's group at the University of Illinois.

The Power-Gen cell and calorimeter are much larger than CETI's previous cold fusion demonstration devices. The cell is 10 cm long, 2.5 cm in diameter, containing roughly 40 ml of beads. Previous cells had about 1 ml of beads. The cell itself is wrapped in opaque foam plastic because the cell geometry has been improved and the improvements are not yet covered by patent applications. Other components in the calorimeter are made of clear Lucite plastic. (Photographs of the device can be found on the World Wide Web; see address below.)

The flow calorimeter reservoir held 2.5 liters and the flow rate was set between 1.0 and 1.5 liters per minute. A control cell was mounted parallel to the hot cell. The flow to both cells is regulated with precision valves. The reservoir and pump consist of a Magnum 220 aquarium pump with micron filter attachment, plus an additional Lucite cylinder built on top to hold a cooling coil, gas trap, and a muffin fan. Water is circulated by a magnetic impeller pump, driven by a 50 watt motor mounted underneath. Static in-line mixers ensure mixing. (These are plastic objects about an inch long with vanes to stir the flow.) A few weeks before the conference, Cravens decided to increase the flow rate in order to keep the temperature below 50 degrees C. The new flow rates exceed the capacity of his flowmeters. He was not able to procure a bigger flowmeter in time for the conference, so no flowmeter was installed. Flow was measured by turning stopcocks to redirect fluid from the cell outlet tube into a graduated cylinder for 15 seconds. This test was performed many times, and the flow rate was not observed to change measurably, except when it was deliberately adjusted between runs. The water hose from pump is coiled in air cooled box on top of reservoir. Air is drawn through box by a 3.5 watt muffin fan. Total power consumption by all components in the calorimeter including the circulation pump, the cooling fan, the cell, control cell, and DC power supplies was 85 watts.

The Delta T temperatures and reservoir temperatures are measured with K-Type thermocouples, with Omega Model HH22 Microprocessor Thermometers. Power is measured with Metex M 3800 series multimeters. The pump, muffin fan and DC power supplies electrolysis all have one common AC cord, which is monitored by a Radio Shack analog AC voltmeter and a multimeter.

The first test was marred by a mysterious malfunction in the control cell. The control cell consisted of tin plated steel shot beads, arranged as an electrochemical cathode, in the same configuration as the smaller CETI thin beads. During tests at the lab, this produced no excess heat, as expected. However, during the first test at one point it appeared to be producing a Delta T temperature as high as 2.6 deg C. Assuming the flow rate and input power were stable, this would indicate a 216 watt excess. When Dennis noticed it was getting hot, he said he thought was due to a short circuit or an obstruction in the flow, or both, since a an obstruction would likely cause both problems. He turned off the control cell for safety, and repaired it later on. He reported to me the next day that it was shorted; the anode and cathode had come in contact because it was plugged up. I expect this explains the apparent excess, but I do not have any detailed data or additional information on this because I was no able to observe the equipment closely when this incident occurred. I did not verify the thermocouple temperatures, and I do not have an opportunity to note the input power levels were, what the flow rate was, or when the apparent excess began. (The incident occurred soon after I arrived. I was sitting across the room listening to the exposition.) The control cell was replaced with a joule heater for the remainder of the conference, which raised the water temperature the normal, expected amount.

Later on, in subsequent tests, I was able to observe the machine closely, and to make direct measurements of its performance with my own tools. I tested the flow rate on cold fusion cell side many times. As noted above, I did not see any measurable changes except when the flow was deliberately changed from 1,300 ml to 1,000 ml per minute by closing the valves. I checked the thermocouple readings in the reservoir, inlet and outlet with two thermistors and a thermometer, and all three agreed closely with the thermocouple readings. The reservoir temperature can be taken by picking up the top and inserting the thermistor probe into the water directly. Testing inlet and outlet temperature required a little more ingenuity. I confirmed the outlet thermocouple reading by taking a 250 ml sample of water from the outlet pipe during a flow test and immediately measuring the temperature before the sample cooled significantly. I confirmed the cold fusion inlet temperature by turning off the control side joule heater and taking a 250 ml sample from the control outlet pipe.

Here is some sample data:

Test 1, December 4, two hours

INPUT POWER
Measured AC: 0.7 A * 120 V = 84 W
Electrolysis: 0.18 A * 8 V = 1.4 W

OUTPUT POWER
Flow rate 1200 ml/minute (300 ml/15 seconds) Delta T Temperature 16 to 17 deg C
1200 ml * 16 deg C * 4.2 = 80,640 j/min = 1,344 W

Test 2, December 5, afternoon, 30 minutes.

INPUT POWER
Measured AC: 0.7 A * 140 V = 98 W
Electrolysis: 0.02 A * 3.9 V = 0.1 W

OUTPUT POWER
Flow rate 1000 ml/min (250 ml/15 seconds) Delta T Temperature 6.7 deg C
1000 ml * 6.7 * 4.2 = 28,140 j/min = 469 W

CETI plans to follow up on this demonstration with demonstrations of prototype consumer products, including larger cells for space heating and heat engines. They are hard at work on these devices and they will demonstrate them as soon they can. They estimate that it will take six months to one year to make suitable prototypes. CETI is now engaged in joint R&D projects with five corporate and university strategic partners, including the University of Illinois and the University of Missouri. All five have independently verified the excess heat. The University of Illinois group has fabricated beads from scratch using a sputtering technique rather than electrolytic deposition. They have observed excess heat from their own beads as well as beads provided to them by CETI.

Akira Kawasaki and I took many photographs of the calorimeter. I scanned four of them, and John Logajan uploaded them in his home page:

www.skypoint.com/members/jlogajan - (link now broken.)

I will describe the Power-Gen demonstration in more detail in an upcoming issue of "Infinite Energy" magazine.

Jed Rothwell, Contributing Editor


Eugene F. Mallove, Sc.D.
Editor-in-Chief and Publisher
INFINITE ENERGY: Cold Fusion and New Energy Technnology (MAGAZINE)

Cold Fusion Technology
P.O. Box 2816
Concord, NH 03302-2816

Tel: 603-228-4516
Fax: 603-224-5975


Date: 29 Mar 96 07:07:50 EST
From: Eugene Mallove <76570.2270@COMPUSERVE.COM>
To: Patrick Bailey
Subject: Re: I Want Your Approval!

Patrick:

You *may* put these two articles on the WWW site -- providing you also have
the attached ad info near them:

Cold Fusion and New Energy Technology Resource Guide *

1995, Edition No. 1 Copyright, 1995 Eugene F. Mallove and Jed Rothwell

and

One Kilowatt Cold Fusion Reactor Demonstrated *

One Kilowatt Cold Fusion Reactor Demonstrated (December 5-7, 1995)
by Jed Rothwell, Contributing Editor, Infinite Energy Magazine

ATTACH AD:
[as above]


Return to the INE Main Page


www.padrak.com/ine/INFENGMAG2.html Oct. 25, 1998 URL links updated; May 5, 2003