Bumps smoothed as I continued to twist the Seven and sweep the attraction beam. Processing the feedback was almost a good as a direct scan. While there were many attractive targets, only a few were in position to be of meaningful assistance. To help, I let the attraction waveform influence induce a synergistic alignment of any One-Eight-Ones in the path of the beam.
While it was nice to detect receptive targets, there was the need to find likely payoffs. This meant that a real scan was in order. It took a little training to promote an Electron to keep the scan circulating, and far less effort to get the Electron to transmit the stress level it experienced as it kept the Seven spinning After tuning the response level, I meandered over to the Seven and then up onto the stationary One.
The beam was working well, and slicing through the soup as the Seven continued its flawless rotation. The squeaks from the Seven's driver were advanced enough that I was able to focus in and take detailed measurements. There were a few candidates at a bit of a distance, but things can change rapidly. For this reason, I kept the proximity scan running, just in case.
March 24, 2010
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