Is Rossi's mass production strategy foolish and unrealistic in the real world?
There is no infrastructure established to support LENR in any form. Producing a million units month will lead to a inventory backlog because these units will not sell because they cannot be installed, because no one knows how to operate them.
The Rossi reactors will not plug and play with existing power production units. Can you hook them up to existing piping, to existing circuits, to existing thermostats?
Will installations be required to change their systems; who will do these changes, are these installers trained, will a million units sit in a shipping yard waiting to be installed by just a few people?
How is Rossi going to handle installation or is he just interested in robots and production. Without car dealers who can sell and service cars? Without car dealers car won't sell.
Will Rossi sell his reactors on the internet, on Amazon, at Home Depot. What is his selling plan?
These LENR reactors are not personal computers that you can just plug into a wall socket and the internet. These reactors require engineering to be installed, expert engineering. A large capacity robot factory does not good when there is no infrastructure there to handle its output.
Is a factory that produces cars productive if there is no roads on which to drive those cars. Such will be the fate of a large numbers of LENR reactors sitting in inventory.
A Rossi competitor will arise who will produce LENR reactors in small numbers but will have the knowhow and skill to custom fit his reactor into the users facility with little impact on the user. This is turnkey plug and play.
Mills' idea about putting his reactor into a car is a good one. Everybody knows how to drive a car and the car can be plugged into a house to power it. The Mills idea is turnkey plug and play. The Mills' idea is a good one,