QuoteThe Wright brothers did this all the time. After the first four powered flights of December 17, 1903, the airplane was turned over and smashed with a gust of wind. It was a cold day, and they debated whether to light the machine on fire for a bonfire to warm up, or whether to box it up and return it to Dayton. In the end they boxed it up. It now hangs in the Smithsonian, the most famous airplane in history. Other airplanes and gliders they flew at Kitty Hawk were abandoned, burned, or donated to local housewives who used the fabric.
You may want to try understanding a post before responding to it. The Wright Brothers didn't use their destruction of a working version as an excuse for not being able to reproduce a working airplane. That is what scammers typically do. It does not mean legitimate scientists might not accidentally destroy something of value from time to time. But claiming you can't reproduce a working version of the most amazing invention of the century because you needed to tear it down to make a better one is ... well ... as dumb as Rossi's claims about his newest creation, the needle sized QuarkX or whatever he called it.