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View Full Version : How to build an orgone accumulator?


Marcus_
10-30-2006, 10:39 PM
I read some info about it, but IMO, not enough.

Does anyone here have advice on how to build a good orgone accumulator?

m1thr0s
10-31-2006, 08:57 AM
I love Wilhelm Reich's stuff. He has been called the "American Prophet" you know...He managed to scare the peejeesus out of the status quo with his stuff though and died under extremely suspicious circumstances as a result.

I know he's got at least one book that outlines the schematics but I very much doubt it's still in print. There are several websites devoted to his work...I'll poke around...If you combine his work and Buckminster Fuller's stuff together you've got the makings of a whole-on time machine I think...

Also one other cat whose name I can't recall...gyroscopes technology was his thing...

m1thr0s

Marcus_
10-31-2006, 03:24 PM
From what I remember, an orgone accumulator -- is a large capacitor which is not wired up to any electronic device, and it gathers/stores ambient energies. But, my memory is not perfect.

http://www.orgone.org/articles/ax5aorcp.htm
http://www.orgone.org/articles/ax2001-grnfld-aa.htm
^
Ah, here we go.

I remember reading somewhere else, about an orgone accumulator that was directional. It channeled all energy to a single point/beam/direction.

m1thr0s
10-31-2006, 03:36 PM
yeah...pyramidal as I remember it with its main force centralized roughly at center.

edit: that's weird...the schematics they illustrate are not as I remember at all. Reich was heavy into pyramids. I am quite certain that the pyramid shape was considered (by him) vital to its working...

is this some sort of ignoramus rehash of his original design?

m1thr0s

MythMath
10-31-2006, 05:57 PM
I love Wilhelm Reich's stuff...
If you combine his work and Buckminster Fuller's stuff together
you've got the makings of a whole-on time machine I think...

Also one other cat whose name I can't recall...
gyroscopes technology was his thing...

m1thr0s
Are you thinking of Elmer Ambrose Sperry (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elmer_Ambrose_Sperry)...?

And can we get Tesla (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikola_Tesla) and Ed Leedskalnin (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Leedskalnin)
to consult with the design team...?

Anibis
10-31-2006, 06:05 PM
Anyone see "The Prestige". Good movie. David Bowie plays Tesla!
-Ibisis-

MythMath
10-31-2006, 06:16 PM
In the future, everyone will be Tesla for fifteen minutes...:o_O:

m1thr0s
10-31-2006, 07:15 PM
I don't think that was him MM...might have been this guy:

Eric Laithwaite (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Laithwaite)

I saw a clip of one of his levitation demos which was pretty interesting...

He was part genius...part looney I guess. Always a precarious combo...

m1thr0s

fr.novumorganum
10-31-2006, 07:53 PM
I also love WR. M1thr0s is right, the pyramid shape was central to his design.

m1thr0s
11-01-2006, 12:01 AM
yeah. weird. there's also supposed to be some sort of organic matter in the mix...hence the term "orgone"...

This smacks of sabotage somehow. It is yet possible that the devise I recall is not quite the same as the Accumulator...though I don't think so...

m1thr0s

fr.novumorganum
11-01-2006, 12:37 AM
huh, interesting. i was just doing some research, and apprently there were multiple desings, including small and large boxes.

i think the triange is most famous b/c that's the one burroughs built:cool:

Marcus_
11-01-2006, 09:54 AM
As regards casting boards, or alters, I'd say it's good to incorporate sacred geometry, energy accumulation materials, and sigils, all at the same time.

Will any of you incorporate the design of an orgone accumulator into the structure of your altars?

Luciftias
11-01-2006, 02:13 PM
Anyone see "The Prestige". Good movie. David Bowie plays Tesla!
-Ibisis-


That was Bowie?! I totally didn't recognize him. Wicked. An interesting coincidece happened to me: When I went and saw the movie, I hadn't known that Tesla was in it, but had just finished reading a biography of him earlier in the day (by Robert Lomas, called something like "Tesla: Inventor of the 20th Century") Good book, by the way. Very inspiring as well as amusing. I've been a fan of Tesla for a long time now. Got into electronics and especially telecommunications because of it. Never actually got around to building a Tesla Coil yet, though.

Luciftias

MythMath
06-03-2008, 03:01 AM
orgone (http://www.orgone.org/articles/ax9kelley1a.htm)