New BLP Innovations
Ever Closer To The Public Demo
BLP provided an update yesterday in a brief new post to their website. Here is the full text:
“The SunCell parts were engineered to be standardized, interchangeable, and enabling of assembly with wrenches replacing hand metal cutting and welding with variations in each unit. These innovations are further enabling of mass production and assembly in readiness for future commercial production. The new design also comprises a new proprietary injector positioning/alignment technology necessitated due to a failure and unavailability of a critical vendor-supplied component. Automation and packaging are also progressing well. The 15 kW of trace heating for the molten metal pump lines to the new pump technology has been replaced with an internal heating system that exploits exiting capability. The power requirements dropped to 2 kW with heating to temperature minutes rather than about 7 hours. Reduction in downtime during implementing new engineering designs is being reduced by outsourcing enabled by complete and detailed engineering drawings of the current standard commercializable design.”
All of this sounds quite promising. The big question is when we will see a public demo of the SunCell and third party validation reports on the power output and ratio of output power to input power. Judging by this update, the answer sounds like it may be “very soon.”
One of the most interesting aspects of the BLP/SunCell story is the fact that from the perspective of the vast majority of humanity, a near-fully fledged new power source, one superior to all existing technology, is going to sort of just appear out of nowhere.
The refinements mentioned in today’s post speak to this. By the time we get a public demo, it seems fairly likely that we have a device that is close to being a fully commercialized device, with full integration of the PV dome perhaps being the sole remaining hurdle before beginning mass manufacturing.
One of the challenges in following the BLP story is that there is quite a lot of background information required to place news like this latest bit out of BLP into appropriate context. If you are new to the BLP story or you’d like to refresh yourself on the basics of it, I encourage you to read or re-read my overview article which is designed to provide that necessary context.
Hydrino is the future, and the future is Brilliant.



I'm wondering how much in the way of "stranded assets" the nuclear (and other) power/energy industries (and investors) are going to experience (and suffer?) when the SunCell (tm) tech takes off ... I could see hybrid power/energy solution as in commercial AC power augmented by SunCells or vice versa for the first few years.
The investment in SMR (small modular reactors) is presently underway, I'm curious if the folks investing and endeavoring in that area have any concept of what may lie ahead given Dr. Mills extensive research and development efforts; will the SMR folks be blinded-sided with a commercial launch of the SunCell, frozen in disbelief, and perhaps the financial-backer types would be moved to make the BrLP shareholders offers (for their stock) they can't (hardly) refuse?
You might think that the Hydrino alone will be the news that will set everything on fire, but GUTCP and its teaching will cause the real paradigm shift when it’s accepted.