> And you can wear a device that can kill most living being at a distance If you don’t, what is the point of that freedom if you have no access to the audience? Seems legit only if you have same access to audience as, say, MSM has.
> It´s the land of freedom because you can say anything you want I still have a (low resolution NTSC) camcorder recording of this somewhere.
#XRAY MACHINE GENERATOR#
My finger also totally stopped them, so there would be no way to get an x-ray of bones due to the low voltage (say 10kV or less) from the ion generator circuit. One piece had little effect, but 50 pieces totally stopped the x-rays. I then tried putting various amount of paper between the tube to see how much the x-rays were attenuated. The Geiger counter went crazy – instead of ticking, it sounded like a screech. I realized there was the possibility that x-rays were being generated, so I brought my Geiger counter nearby. Once the vacuum reached a low enough pressure, the glow would stop. For the high voltage, I used a negative ion generator module. One end was sealed around the wire with epoxy, and the other end was connected to a piece of plastic tubing which I connected to the vacuum pump. I had two small coils of copper wire, one at each end. I had created a “tube” from a clear ball point pen case. I was experimenting with homemade gas discharge tubes, using an HVAC vacuum pump. I created x-rays back in the 2000s, using all homemade equipment. Posted in Medical Hacks Tagged high voltage, medical, vacuum tube, x-ray, x-ray imaging, xray Post navigation We’ve seen homemade X-Ray machines here at Hackaday before, but not one that is constructed perhaps so haphazardly - his approach makes this obvious: don’t try this at home. The results were actually pretty decent and you can clearly see the bones. The next items to go in the x-ray “chamber” were a phone and a hand. With a finger bone cast in ballistic shell made his first x-ray with a long exposure on a DSLR. Safety measures are taken somewhat haphazardly with Geiger counters and lead sheets. Then the high voltage (30-150kv) is applied as a tube voltage, accelerating the electrons into x-rays. A smaller power supply energizes the cathode and forms an electron beam. What if he could make an x-ray machine to do cheap x-rays?Īrmed with a cheap high voltage DC power supply he acquired from an online auction house, he started to power up his x-ray vacuum tube. Thanks to his insurance, the total owed was smaller but still ridiculous to those who live in single-payer health care countries, but it got William thinking. After receiving an eye-watering medical bill, resolves to make his own x-ray machine in the hopes of avoiding future bills. Despite the risk of radiation, has done just that and built a homemade x-ray machine. While we typically encourage hackers to make their own tools or machines when practical, x-ray machines don’t usually make that list.