

So I set out to build the kind of machine that would work for me – something artistically beautiful and stylish as well as functional, with well-crafted details and smooth, accurate controls.Īs a kind of retro-tech geek, I’ve always loved the look and feel of antique electronic devices and artistic Steampunk machine creations.

If you’re going to do something, do it right! What I didn’t realize when I first set out to build this amazing machine that it was going to evolve from a weird science experiment to an expression of Art.įor Radionics to work, we’re told, the operator has to have a special rapport with his or her machine. Or real knobs that I knew weren’t actually connected to anything (like so many Radionics devices I’ve seen advertised.) While I can entertain the possibility of Radionics actually working, I never thought much of the Psionics idea of drawing pictures of machines and using cardboard cutouts for dials to practice Radionics – I’m an audio engineer by trade and I just couldn’t be comfortable with fake knobs. I’ve been wanting to study Radionics for some time, but I was never sufficiently motivated to expend the time and/or money to obtain a Radionics machine.
