Monday, April 25, 2016

muilti-core field generator test

 It doesn't look like much but the unit to the left is a multi-coil, multi-density field generator that took five gallons of resin and a couple weeks of work.  The inner core is an elongated torus containing six mobius coils, each consisting of 100' of insulated, solid core, copper wire and connected in series, cast in extremely dense orgonite with a mixture of powdered aluminum, iron oxide, and copper oxide in polyester resin.  The next layer is medium density orgonite with aluminum chips and just enough iron oxide to stabilize the mix.  The top coat is several layers of shellac as an organic layer.  The central core is the same design I used with other units... Cone, mostly quartz sand and powdered aluminum with a mini orgone accumulator in the base.

To say building this device was a bitch would be an understatement.  In previous posts I mentioned the steps I took to keep all the edges smooth and free from voids.  Each step of the process made this thing work a little better and it paid off.

This thing rocks, but it was the little problems that I had to overcome that made the difference.  For example, after applying the shellac I could feel a noticeable increase in energy output but lost some of that when I used the shellac on the inner shaft surface.  That's when I remembered the basic rule of orgone accumulation.  Metal on the inside, organic material on the outside.  I figured the inner shaft was just the surface turned inside out.  It seems the inner shaft IS the accumulator and the organic shellac layer reduced it's performance.  After figuring out C = 3.14 x D, I cut out some metal and inserted it in the shaft.  The difference was dramatic.

Wilhelm Reich knew what he was talking about.  An orgone accumulator is made up of layers of metal and organic material with the organic material on the outside and metal on the inside.  Organic material attracts orgone energy where metals attract it and quickly repel it, allowing orgone energy to concentrate inside the ORAC.  Apparently, the same principle applies to a torus field generator.

I still didn't have a clue what I was going to do with this thing so I put it in my car to see what would happen.  I wanted to set it up to run whenever the car was running with an amplified frequency separate from the sound system.  The hook up was so simple I don't know why I never thought of it before.    

I connected a 12v amp and mp3 player to an accessory outlet and wired the mobius leads to the amp.  Since a mobius coil has little to no resistance, hooking it up to the left or right speaker output would blow the amp, so I used the negatives for both left and right.

It worked and the amplified signal put out a wicked energy signature.

This was last Monday morning.  By afternoon I got an email from someone who asked if I would be interested in a trip to Mongolia to work with him building field generator cbs to bring rain to his farms.  All expenses paid and I could stay as long as need be.  If it rains, I get paid.  If not, I got a free trip to Mongolia.

If that was all this story was about, it would be nothing more than a fantastic coincidence but there's more to this that permanently blew my mind.  It was just a few days before this I was thinking about setting up a business where I would offer my services to travel where needed to instruct, build, and teach how to do this stuff.
That thought was still in the back of my mind when I installed and fired up this unit.

It seems I found a purpose for this multi-coil field generator and it wasn't to fix a rainy day.  It turns out this unit is an extremely powerful succor punch capable of picking up a thought, interpret it as intent and instantly manifest that thought into reality.

I decided to shut the unit down and accept that the experiment was a success.

What would YOU do with one of these?  

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Nice to see C = 3.14 x D

:)

I have sent you an email.