B
Bret Cahill
Guest
I'm taking all comers.
Bret Cahill
Bret Cahill
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Show us some stuff you've designed.I'm taking all comers.
Bret Cahill
Cartoons. How about some hardware?Show us some stuff you've designed.
www.BretCahill.com
Bret Cahill
Show us some stuff you've designed.
www.BretCahill.com
Bret Cahill
Cartoons. How about some hardware?
You want it delivered?
For what purpose?
Anyway you are already down one straw. You have never generated a
single novel idea in your entire life.
Since you have no IP or web page, perhaps you'ld like to try something
else?
Maybe you want to impress someone with your proficiency in vector
calculus?
Maybe you unnerstand Maxwell's equations.
Show us what you got.
Bret Cahill
You want it delivered?Show us some stuff you've designed.
www.BretCahill.com
Bret Cahill
Cartoons. How about some hardware?
---I'm taking all comers.
Commercially available stacked flat plat heat exchangers are far moreI'm taking all comers.
All you've ever made clear is that you don't know what you're talkingI thought I made that clear.
I think you've made your point Bret. It should be easy for any ofShow us some stuff you've designed.
www.BretCahill.com
Bret Cahill
---Cite?
Huge!
Show your work.
On Jul 31, 12:58 am, BretCah...@peoplepc.com wrote:
Show us some stuff you've designed.
www.BretCahill.com
Bret Cahill
I think you've made your point Bret. It should be easy for any of
these guys to critique your proposal, particularly John Larkin who is
in the coffee processing business.
On Wed, 30 Jul 2008 21:10:20 -0700 (PDT), Bret Cahill
BretCahill@aol.com> wrote:
I'm taking all comers.
Bret Cahill
Show us some stuff you've designed.
John
Please don't feed the troll.
Is he ashamed of it or what?Show us some stuff you've designed.
www.BretCahill.com
Bret Cahill
Cartoons. How about some hardware?
You want it delivered?
For what purpose?
Anyway you are already down one straw. �You have never generated a
single novel idea in your entire life.
Since you have no IP or web page, perhaps you'ld like to try something
else?
� �Yes John has his corporate web page,
Which is?I think you've made your point Bret.
Why aren't they doing it?It should be easy for any of
these guys to critique your proposal,
Then we can forget about him saving any quads, not that their was everparticularly John Larkin who is
in the coffee processing business.
Because it's easier than trying to transfer directly from a gas to aBut as usual, I'm the one who has
to pick up the burden...
Referring to picture 2:
Before we get into the actual physics of it, where would you apply
this? Why are we heating up liquids and then transferring the heat to
a gas?
Yes. With fluidization all you need is a single pipe.Are you talking about something like auto radiators when you
say radiator?
Fins work in fluidization as wellCommercially available stacked flat plat heat exchangers are far more
efficient.. (no need for a working fluid, greater surface area,
The heat transfer coefficient is an order of magnitude greater withhigher
heat transfer coefficient.) .
You cut/snip dodge tech issues like the plague.I thought I made that clear.
All you've ever made clear is that
Well that's one place where I don't agree. It is obviously always moreI think you've made your point Bret.
Which is?
It should be easy for any of
these guys to critique your proposal,
Why aren't they doing it?
Uh, oh, now they are going to start saying,
"Cite?"
"Huge!"
"Show your work."
particularly John Larkin who is
in the coffee processing business.
Then we can forget about him saving any quads, not that their was ever
any hope for him.
But as usual, I'm the one who has
to pick up the burden...
Referring to picture 2:
Before we get into the actual physics of it, where would you apply
this? Why are we heating up liquids and then transferring the heat to
a gas?
Because it's easier than trying to transfer directly from a gas to a
gas.
Yeah I think you are wrong on that. Your particles are going to beAre you talking about something like auto radiators when you
say radiator?
Yes. With fluidization all you need is a single pipe.
Only the application is new on that one.
Bret Cahill
No reasoning?I think you've made your point Bret.
Which is?
It should be easy for any of
these guys to critique your proposal,
Why aren't they doing it?
Uh, oh, now they are going to start saying,
"Cite?"
"Huge!"
"Show your work."
particularly John Larkin who is
in the coffee processing business.
Then we can forget about him saving any quads, not that their was ever
any hope for him.
But as usual, I'm the one who has
to pick up the burden...
Referring to picture 2:
Before we get into the actual physics of it, where would you apply
this? Why are we heating up liquids and then transferring the heat to
a gas?
Because it's easier than trying to transfer directly from a gas to a
gas.
Well that's one place where I don't agree. It is obviously always more
efficient to avoid the intermediate step, unless you are talking about
transport, where the liquid covers some distance.
Are you talking about something like auto radiators when you
say radiator?
Yes. �With fluidization all you need is a single pipe.
Yeah I think you are wrong on that.
The reason it isn't clear is because you never studied fluidizationYour particles are going to be
separated by the moving air, so it isn't clear how you expect to get
improved heat transfer.