Saturday, May 14, 2011

riddles

Tuesday morning I heard the radio weatherman forecast the next two days as nice and it got my attention.  No mention of highs or lows.  Not a word about chances of this or that.  No percentages or highs in the low to mid whatever temperature range.  "The weather for the next two days will be nice."  Period.  End of report.

Nice weather is the optimum temperature, humidity, and air circulation humans regard as their only reward for putting up with the frozen winters and sweltering summers of a temperate climate.  A nice day means there's no pressure, no schedules, no rushing off to do preplanned activities, and no one can blame you for blowing off a day of work.  As opposed to the beautiful day, full of preplanned activities with a secondary objective as a day to remember, a nice day is an impromptu surprise with no future or past to get in the way of your blissful now state.

A perfect day to mow half a lawn, stack a few logs, look at the garden, and make orgonite.

 What you see to the left is an inner core made of powdered aluminum, ferrous oxide and resin, containing a 60' mobius coil.  The copper tube around it is a modified Lakhovsky coil, filled with water and a few crystals, and sealed at both ends.

Lakhovsky experimented with this coil design in 1924 on ten geranium plants inoculated with a plant cancer.  He took one of the ten infected plants and simply fashioned a heavy copper wire in a one loop, open-ended coil about 12" diameter around the center of the plant.  By two months the plant was thriving and after three years it remained a robust specimen.  The other plants, without the coil, died within 30 days.

It's this Lakhovsky gap concept that makes the PVC CB, with a simple cone HHG and field generator, out perform units with ten times as much mass.  It's worth a shot to add an internal coil to this unit and see what happens.  Considering orgonite and water have this symbiotic relationship, it's a no-brainer to include water.

The result is a unit with roughly the same mass as Jupiter 2 with an inner core 30% larger.  And just like Jupiter 2, it takes a minute or two to feel anything after you fire it up, but when you do, the energy can be felt across the room with no degradation.  This is one powerful succor and it's only two thirds completed.

What's that white stuff, you say?  That's the enamel from the angel-food cake pan I used for the mold.  I got in the habit of using olive oil to keep the resin from sticking to the mold when casting smaller pieces, but these larger ones need more than a light coat.  Casting torus shaped units of this size will compress around the center and when they cure you'll need a really good release agent or you'll be tearing the mold off with a hammer and chisel. 

Mental note...  Vaseline works.

I haven't decided if I should clean off the white stuff or take it as a positive adjustment by the Universe to correct a detail I missed.  It's altogether possible bake ware enamel has chemical and physical properties that would benefit the function of this piece, at this stage of construction.

Did the Universe think I needed help with my homework or was I using cheap Chinese bake ware?
What do you think?   
 

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

karmasurfer where do you get your crystals from? cause ive look all over the net & i can't find the larger ones (6"+) that wont blow a huge hole in my bank

karmasurfer said...

Jim Coleman has some nice crystals at decent prices. This is where I go if I need crystals in bulk.
http://www.jimcolemancrystals.com/