V1020 DIY 2 Time Machine Introduction

Overview

This video introduces the creator's second DIY project: building a time machine, or more accurately, a dimensional displacement machine within a vehicle. This project differs from the creator's first project, a fixed portal, which is versatile but potentially dangerous.

The core concept involves constructing a vehicle capable of traveling through time, space, and dimensional realities. The creator highlights limitations of this method, primarily related to the equipment used and the size of the chosen vehicle, referencing "Back to the Future" as an example of utilizing a vehicle for time travel. The idea is to integrate a time displacement or dimensional movement mechanism into a vehicle to travel between dimensions or "World lines."

The video emphasizes that this "time machine" allows for travel within a point in time or to an apparent point in time along one's World line, using historical records as projected paths. It also allows for geographic movement, enabling the user to input coordinates for travel. However, the technique has limitations; it doesn't allow for travel to radically different World lines.

The creator explains that the mechanism searches for similar World lines automatically, unlike the fixed portal where users specify the destination. The time machine uses sensors, like magnetic flux and gravitational variance sensors, to find the closest approximation. The accuracy of these readings depends on the number of sensors used, but algorithms can alter sensor behavior, potentially leading to unexpected destinations.

A key concept introduced is the "Delta," or deviation, that occurs in time travel using this method. This deviation arises because travel is relative to the present point of reference, not an absolute past. As one travels further from their present, the Delta increases, resulting in a cone of deviation. The farther one travels and the more trips one makes, the greater the cumulative deviations become. This means that on a return trip, one may not arrive back at the intended point in time or dimension. This type of travel is useful for apparent time travel, but it has inherent inaccuracies. The creator plans future videos to discuss the mechanism's structures and elements in detail. The creator advises careful consideration before altering one's current state and impacting deviations across generations.

Highlight

00:01 - 01:01

The speaker introduces a new DIY series on "World line travel," distinguishing it from a previous series on fixed portals. While fixed portals are versatile and forgiving, small accidents can have large consequences. This new series will focus on constructing a time machine, a vehicle for traveling through time, space, and dimensional realities, though it has limitations.

01:05 - 02:19

The primary limitation of this time machine technique is the equipment used and the size of the vehicle. The speaker references "Back to the Future" and the DeLorean, emphasizing the need for a mobile vehicle with a time displacement or dimensional movement mechanism. This mechanism allows travel from dimension to dimension, or "World line to World line."

02:22 - 04:41

The speaker clarifies the capabilities of the time machine, stating that it allows travel anywhere within a point in time or at a parent point in time. They explain that "time" is the experience on a world line, and historical records are projected paths along that world line. The machine also allows geographic movement and dimensional variances, but not to drastically different world lines.

04:41 - 06:16

This video serves as an overview, introducing the mechanism which searches for similar World lines automatically, unlike the first DIY portal where users specified the destination. The mechanism uses sensors, similar to the first project, to look for magnetic flux and gravitational variances. More sensors increase accuracy, but algorithms can alter sensor behavior for more unpredictable adventures.

06:17 - 07:28

The speaker corrects themself, acknowledging that some have altered sensors for wild adventures, but typically in fixed devices, not vehicles. This leads to a brief mention of a potential DIY project number three involving altering devices in residences. The focus returns to DIY project number two, the time machine, which is more accurately described as a dimensional displacement machine based on a vehicle.

07:28 - 09:31

The speaker uses the example of a Cadillac to illustrate how the time machine would function. Traveling to the future would present the car as an antique, while traveling to the past would make it seem futuristic. The speaker suggests using a bland, inconspicuous vehicle to avoid drawing attention. The most effective use of this machine is apparent time travel, but deviations increase the further one travels.

09:33 - 11:52

The speaker introduces a "World line template" to visually explain the concept of time travel and dimensional deviation. The template illustrates a lifeline, birth, and the present moment, with dotted lines representing the highest probability of other world lines. The mechanism seeks the closest approximation on this dotted line when traveling to a point before birth.

11:52 - 13:40

The speaker continues explaining the World line template, emphasizing that time travel using this machine won't be perfect. They illustrate how a journey to the past will land on a similar, but not identical, world line. The deviation from the intended point increases with distance from the present, creating a "cone" of potential destinations, with the deviation known as "Delta."

13:45 - 16:44

The speaker emphasizes that this deviation is an inherent limitation of DIY project number two, unlike DIY one and three. They illustrate how multiple trips to the past result in cumulative and exponential deviations, making accurate returns difficult. This means that dimensional travel is uncontrolled and determined by the equipment's accuracy, making it useful for apparent time travel but limited in precision.

16:50 - 19:22

The speaker concludes by announcing future videos will cover the mechanism's structures and elements, emphasizing the need for contextual background. They advise against using conspicuous vehicles and highlight the generational impact on deviation, making long-term control difficult. The speaker advises viewers to be content with their current situation and not to disrupt things unnecessarily. They also share a personal note about recovering from Coronavirus and plans for changes to "Metallic Mint."