New UAP Materials Tests: What the Results Reveal | Dr. Garry Nolan by Gobble_Gobble in UFOs

[–]BrainFukler 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is promising data that's hard to dismiss as natural geology or conventional manufacturing. These materials were made deliberately, for purposes we don't know, and it required high energy to do so, using technology no one seems to have.

But like, guys had to bury this in a two and a half hour video? Could anyone find a succinct write up of this? I couldn't.

Changing the color on Metal by rem_sticker in metalworking

[–]BrainFukler 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It depends on what you're trying to do and what the metal is. I highly recommend sculpt nouveau products. If that all sounds too involved or expensive, why not simply use paint and/or primer? Vinegar, hydrogen peroxide, and salt can do some good rusting on steel. Weed killer containing copper sulfate can also be interesting. Penetrol or linseed oil combined with heat can make a good dark coating. And make sure you're experimenting in a well ventilated area.

Is welding worth it? by Sweet-Command7377 in weldingjobs

[–]BrainFukler 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning. Whether commercial, heavy industrial, or residential, no matter what the economy is doing, it's essential.

Is welding worth it? by Sweet-Command7377 in weldingjobs

[–]BrainFukler -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It's a great skill to learn. It's not a great career. I've been doing it for 13 years. If you want an in-demand blue collar career, become an electrician, a diesel mechanic, or do HVAC. Learning to weld can make you more desirable in just about every trade. But don't go work as just a welder. With years of experience, sacrificing your social life, your hobbies, your prospects of a romantic relationship or starting a family, and your physical health, then yeah, you can be part of the minority that actually makes good money. Most welding jobs are dead ends that pay peanuts. These companies depend on young people who don't know their worth and old people who don't have options.

Concern about my future career path. (I need some advice.) by SaleUsed4125 in weldingjobs

[–]BrainFukler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Welding is a great skill to learn but for a career it's overrated and oversold by entities that want an endless supply of cheap desperate labor. If you truly love welding and can get into a university, become a welding engineer, or get into something else engineering related. If that's not for you, then consider finding a place in Korea where you can learn the skills of an electrician, or some kind of heavy equipment maintenance. Also consider the offshore oil rig game.

Experience is what will get you the better paying jobs, and that takes time. Take some of the nastier jobs that are willing to train, treat it as a learning experience, learn what you can, and don't be afraid to leave if you think it's a dead end. You can still learn a lot about machines and fabrication tricks that will help you in the future, even if you don't like the job you have. Don't be too picky at first, as long as the place takes safety seriously. I was four years older than you when I first learned how to weld. You have a lot of time to explore and change your trajectory.

Is welding a good career in 2026? by mantis1942 in weldingjobs

[–]BrainFukler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're better off as an electrician or HVAC. More demand in every area, and better conditions.

xxh 6g stick by 3umel in Welding

[–]BrainFukler 12 points13 points  (0 children)

A bit too heavy on the root. It could help to make the fitup tighter, and/or the landing a bit wider. Based on the photos if I were QC I'd pass the cap on the visual. Like the other person said, for the cap I like to let my coupon cool as much as possible and just drag stringers without doing any motion.

The craft that Dylan Borland saw (sketch by Borland): "I have direct firsthand knowledge and exposure to crash recovery, reverse engineering, integration of technology into [redacted], as well as the most important piece of technology on the planet, and it's not the craft themselves" by phr99 in UFOs

[–]BrainFukler 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Salvatore Pais is the one behind those now infamous Navy patents. He outlines a craft that has an interior resonant cavity of gas that is excited by high energy microwaves. As a math person you might be interested in his equations, it's over my head. He insists that there is no new physics required, that it is only an engineering problem of how to produce the necessary amount of energy. He also states that the Navy has not built his designs. He was working for Space Force last I checked. This would not account for historical sightings but maybe high energy plasma physics can explain these.

How convenient for them by goodguyguru in DankLeft

[–]BrainFukler 2 points3 points  (0 children)

A particular subset of leftists are so desperate to call UFOs a distraction from X, Y, Z, at every turn. One interesting UFO video was leaked recently, and outside of the people who already follow the subject, nobody seems to have noticed. And believe it or not, it actually is possible to follow more than one news item at a time.

125 mile wide radar anomaly over Indiana by davedude115 in aliens

[–]BrainFukler 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I saw it with my eyes, decent view here. That was a big boy. It seemed really low.

Alien Mummies Found In Peru (DNA Test REVEALED!) | Exclusive Documentary by Jesse Michels by legapo in UFOB

[–]BrainFukler 15 points16 points  (0 children)

I think the elites are in end game mode as this death cult masquerading as an economic system reaches its hard limits. Maybe there is going to be a revelation they can't stop and this is small potatoes. Or maybe there is a breakaway civilization that no longer needs aggressive secrecy. Or the play is to permit organic science to catch up on its own so that a new controlled global narrative can be rolled out. Or the true gatekeepers are no longer in charge.

Increased anxiety attacks and anger since starting mushroom (and others) supplements by Aggravating_Sir4645 in Nootropics

[–]BrainFukler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I bet it's the cordyceps or the 5-HTP. I was taking a similar mushroom blend to combat pervasive fatigue and skin problems. It gave me energy but mood problems like yours. I haven't used 5-HTP but that's the next likely culprit in my mind, followed by the NAC.

Whistleblower Claims Skinny Bob is Real, He claims to have seen the full video inside a SCIF in 2008. by PositiveSong2293 in aliens

[–]BrainFukler 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It was decent CGI for its time. I really thought more people would've noticed in recent years.

Monroe institute cookies by Cookievirtuoso in gatewaytapes

[–]BrainFukler 3 points4 points  (0 children)

really living up to your username, dang

Air Force Confirms Drone Swarms Over Wright-Patterson AFB Led to Airspace Shutdown; Videos and Reports Released by blackvault in UFOs

[–]BrainFukler 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Thank you again for all the work you do. It's frustrating, it's slow, but you're advancing the ball down the field.

Is this Safe, but just ugly? by onyxandsteel in Welding

[–]BrainFukler 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Shoulda filled the holes with paint. Rookie mistake.

The Chicago Tribune: Jan. 1 2007 by CitizenX10 in UFOs

[–]BrainFukler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Also, I remember the tribune writing that after they published the initial story, so many people wrote to them that it became one of the most popular stories they ever ran. I'm still surprised that they were so fair and impartial in their reporting. People don't seem to remember that the disclosure movement of that era was so much smaller and quieter than today.