Problem: Constructing a complete, stand alone PVC CB that will not only clear up low level surf overcast but make it tinker-toy simple to assemble.
I'm a tinkerer, not a mechanical engineer, so coming up with a low cost, full sweep, modified, satellite dish cb that can be set up quickly, in any terrain, took some thought before I settled on being simple about it.
The platform is 3/4" plywood with four 2x4's radiating out to make this unit as stable as possible. The low profile of the dish, field generator, and pipe give it a low center of gravity, preventing tip over from strong winds or clumsy people. The dish, field generator, and PVC pipe is a single unit and the legs are held on by wing nuts. No tools required for assembly. The base, ring generator, and big pipe are shellacked as an organic layer and protective coating. Looks pretty cool, too.
The field generator is has a few improvements. Hell, every field generator I build has a few improvements and this one is four generations beyond the one I'm now using. I'm not satisfied with just grinding out cookie cutter field generators and orgonite using the same formula, the same way, as if I was producing assembly line, mass produced crap for the masses. These units aren't just functional works of art. Each unit has distinct improvements from the previous model, which was an improvement from the one before. I'm satisfied this unit rocks better than anything I made before in ways I didn't expect.
A friend of mine uses sand as the primary ingredient in his orgonite with powdered aluminum and just enough resin to hold it together. Since sand is primarily crushed quartz, compressing it with resin and powdered metals should be enough to produce very strong orgonite. And it does because sand IS quartz, and his orgonite is not only incredible but the lowest in cost.
So, the secondary density in this field generator has six handfuls of play sand and two teaspoons of powdered aluminum per quart of resin. By comparison, the inner density that contains the mobius is powdered copper and iron oxide in a very dense mixture. The result is a 28 lb powered field generator with a secondary density powerful enough to run in passive mode. The torus shape concentrates and directs the energy output far more efficiently than a basic CB three times it's mass. Introducing frequency is just icing on the cake to this stand-alone orgone generator.
The test consisted of pointing it south and powering it up with 14Hz for one day and letting it run in passive mode for six more days.
The weather for that week was sunshine, blue skies, gentle breezes, and not a drop of rain in sight. Rather impressive, considering we've had more rain than any place in North America since spring.
I figure if it can cure a rainy day in Pennsylvania it can easily blow away those pesky low level surf clouds that make west coast tanning such a chore.
I wonder if Al Gore would approve?
Monday, November 28, 2011
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