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On 2016-06-25 7:33 pm i posted
Also, i mix in a 5-gallon plastic bucket. The residue that sticks to the bucket gets programmed too, by default. Once this dries hard, a few smacks of the bucket on a hard surface will cause the residue to break loose in chips.
I just now poured a fat cylinder. After i poured the mix, i added a bunch of these chips, then the stones.
Well, it finally consented to slide out of the mold:
Most of the chips were of the Water Pgm. But the unit is mostly Plasterite Pgm.
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Last night i realized that the Plasterite Program now goes into wet concrete! So my allies are scouting around for foundations and bridges being poured, etc. Ey and Tori are 2 little Arcturan girls on The Committee, who are normally in charge of programming things in the environment, so if you know of some concrete projects going on, you might be able to tell them.
What this means is that the plasterite we have been making is being dwarfed by the sheer magnitude of all the concrete being poured around the world. Some of it is going to get the water pgm too, against the Hum demons.
So now i'm thinking it is only worthwhile to pour plaster for making specialized and hybrid plasterite/orgonite devices.
What about making concretite devices? Much more water-resistant. Much harder and tougher. And Sakrete, Quickcrete, etc. cost a small fraction of what plaster costs. And i think they would be just as good, energetically.
Damn, now i wish i hadn't bought these 2 as-yet-unused bags of plaster.
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Good news, will be attentive if some building work around. Lucky one who will have the Plasterite house
Also for gifting much more durable!
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I would like to point out an idea, so Loohan can experiment with the remaining plaster he has, as well as others and me too, time permitting next weeks...
use plaster to make big platonic solids made out of a mold that is made out of cardboard. totally inexpensive and probably worth out to try. Maybe a program for each solid one will be done by the C.
I got this idea by reading here, page 38. (a document about biogeometry)
http://www.journal.faa-design.com/pdf/4-1-doaa.pdf
The center of any geometric shape (circle, square.... ) produce balancing energy which is emitted in the surrounding space.
This happens for shape in 2D. I guess 3D too.
I would say it is a good idea to try at 1st a simple cube, not necessarily much big.
Then try a bigger cube.
Then try others, up to icosahedron
Here a site where you can print the paper, glue to the cardboard, cut, and make all of the above.
(click on model link on right of each solid)
https://www.mathsisfun.com/geometry/mod … -tips.html
this is for the cube
doing this with resin is totally another story....
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The thing is, many of our pgms make the resin/plaster/concrete's shape irrelevant.
I doubt shape matters with the Plasterite pgm or Water pgm.
Now, if u are NOT getting Committee pgming in a batch of plasterite, i think geometry WOULD be relevant. Might be worth an experiment.
Of course, pyramids, tetrahedrons, and cones would be good, too. Concrete might be wiser for the first 2.
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Hello...
No metal means no metallized tape. A reader seemed unclear on the concept.
So if you take something, for example a hunk of plasterite, and wrap the metallized tape around it, don't re-cast that in the Plasterite pgm. You can re-cast it in the Water Pgm or resin.
In other news, i have still been hearing the Hum a bit every few days.
Also picked up a couple bags of Quickrete today. Total around $8.
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Doing some devices I remember of this and do some mini balls to test. Tomorrow I will gift some places around here.
https://s31.postimg.cc/o6nk88exz/CAM01239.jpg
Sofisticated devices ready for stoning Head hitting, Diego!
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Finally got around to pouring my first concretite. I used a whole 80# bag of Quikrete. I used a lot more water than recommended but it still did not seem very soupy.
I just mixed it in a big old wheelbarrow with a shovel, just like i did when i poured cabin footings in 2001.
Dumped some into a traffic cone with the shovel, then used a garden trowel to fill smaller containers.
These concrete mixes have much more gravel than ideal, so the result will probably feel a bit more "stony" and less orgoney. In the future i will get some portland cement and sand and mix my own.
I presume that's what they do when making cemenite.
BTW i think one could make metallic cemenite with the WATER PGM and it would turn out good.
I think Diego told me he uses 1 part cement and 3 parts sand. Many mixes are possible.
Some instructions on how to use pre-fab concrete mixes:
http://www.familyhandyman.com/masonry/p … e/view-all
Instructions on rolling your own:
http://matse1.matse.illinois.edu/concrete/bm.html
You can buy a bag of cement from your local hardware store. A bag contains 94 lb. (40kg) of cement. Once the bag has been opened, place it inside a garbage bag (or two) that is well sealed from air. This will keep the cement fresh during the semester. An open bag will pick up moisture and the resulting concrete may be weaker. Once cement develops lumps, it must be discarded. The ready mix company in your area may give you cement free of charge in a plastic pail.
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My first concretite. This is all with Quikrete, which is a bit too gravely but still works OK. All the programming is the Plasterite Pgm except the ice cubes to the right have the Water Charging Pgm. These latter are mainly for embedding within future units.
I forgot to add bionized sand until after i had poured most of the stuff. I sprinkled a bit on the base of the cone and mixed some into the concrete that went into the cups and cylindrical plastic containers.
That last linked article says "To strengthen samples and to promote hydration, soak concrete in water (after it is set)." So i will store the left side ice cubes at least in water.
These ice cube are too gravelly and i'm not sure how easily they might break under impact.
I wrote earlier that with all the concrete worldwide being programed with this, it may not be that worthwhile to make a bunch. However, i am nonetheless prompted to spread this stuff around. I expect to make a bunch more ice cubes, etc. and liberally deploy them.
I put WD-40 on the ice cube trays and the cubes fell right out. Now i will soak the trays in water and hope the residue will come off.
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...here my first poured today, will see tomorrow how will go out. They really did nice clear field after some dumpen vibe in the air.
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When i pick mine up, i am impressed with how powerful they feel; very similar to strong resin items.
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I wrote earlier that with all the concrete worldwide being programed with this, it may not be that worthwhile to make a bunch. However, i am nonetheless prompted to spread this stuff around.
It's really good substitute for plasterite, harder and water reistant...and nice for gifting, as far did some with plasterites and was obvious brighter vibe change.
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Poured another bag this morning. This is the yield from 1 $4 bag of Quikrete. Plus ~1/2 cup bionized sand. Plus 40 ice cubes from the previous bag went into 40 of the TBs.
I rescue used coffee cups from work. Every day is Earth Day at Loohan Industries. I think these are 8 or 9 oz cups.
9 trays of ice cubes, and 46 TBs. Plus one hamburger patty. I forgot to put water-pgm ice cubes in the 1st 6 TBs.
Again 5 of the trays of ice cubes have the Water Pgm, for later casting in other stuff.
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Concretite/Plasterite is Summer hit! Inspired to rebuilt and update some parts of my cottage and around
The biggest one, hemisphere I made, didn't go out yet from inox pot, but gives a nice energy field and good to sit on it.
...and when I've soaked concretitos in water for 24h and came out more solid and almost white. So if durable in water, best for gifting...just prepared some bigger pieces for it.
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