Feb 28, 2013

Crv

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I found a document beneath the kitchen sink while looking for plastic bags. The moisture got to it, but I can make almost everything out:

"Production process FF-55.601/13
Owned by:
Unlicensed distribution is forbidden

PHASE I - intersecting the material's inert state
Submersion into HBr is the most efficient method discovered to date. Time of exposure is determined by the amount of inhibiting impurities in the ore. Since submersion lasting longer than three minutes hinders needed contractive properties over the 81% mark, overly contaminated ore is of no use to us and is to be neutralized.

PHASE II - innervating the propeller
To avoid trauma and buy additional time, the purified ore is cooled down to 180°K. Once stabilised, a shallow hole, 10mm in diameter, is to be drilled in the exposed joint to serve as a root and connection point for the nervature. After 24 hours, gradually heat the product up to 303°K while testing for sensory responsiveness. Only (missing) (can?) ti(missing)."
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1 comment:

  1. HBr is the common abbreviation for Hydrogen Bromide, a highly corrosive substance which can be both a gas and liquid. It is extremely harmful to humans. Crv could be referring to chromium vanadium steel, a type of corrosion-resistant metal. Interestingly, chromium vanadium steel can expand and contract more than other types of steel. However, I haven't found any surgical uses for it, so I could be going in the wrong direction there.

    The post mentions 303 degrees Kelvin. This translates to 87 degrees Fahrenheit, which is considered a stable holding temperature for cold-sensitive nerve receptors - and the post mentions warming a product up to this temperature. Additionally, joint replacement surgery outcomes are improved by freezing nerves, and the other mentioned temperature, 180 degrees Kelvin, is certainly freezing, translating to -135 degrees Fahrenheit.

    My best guess is that this refers to some kind of surgery involving either connecting nerves or replacing a joint.

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