wimplesteen.com

All about your friend, the tin foil hat!

So don one and lets begin.

Tin foil hat facts:

1. They are made of REAL tin, not aluminum.

2. They reduce emfs inside itself.
(near 100% if no holes, since the bottom is still open)

3. They keep your thoughts private if made correctly.

4. Without proper grounding they shock your brain a bit.
(i have some firsthand experience)

5. Even a small hole can impact the effectiveness of the hat.

6. Thin tin sheets have less problems with holes.
(no need for thick sheets though, thats too much.)

7. Tin foil hats deactivate nanobots (according to many bitchute videos)

How to make a tin foil hat: (tin foil version)

Using tin FOIL is nice, but its prone to getting a lot of holes.
I recommend using thin tin sheets to get better results. (scroll down for that)
Nevertheless, here are the instructions:

Step 1. Get a big rectangular piece of tin.

Step 2. Fold it in half by its length.

Step 3. Fold two of the corners to the middle. You'll get two triangles that touch.

Step 4. Put 3-4 straw pieces on the sides.

Step 5. Fold both sides up.

Step 6. ???

Step 7. You're done!

Here's a picture:

How to make a tin sheet hat:

This is the ideal thickness for a tin foil hat,
in my opinion. Its still easy to bend, yet its thick enough that it'll only get holes if you poke it against some metal.

Step 1. Buy this tin from ebay.
(or anything similar, but not too thick)
(around maybe 2-3 i think should be enough)

Step 2. Get one of the tin pieces and strech it from right before your forehead,
to the back of your head.

Step 3. Give it some shape and cut the excess tin.

Step 4. Cut enough tin from the other pieces to form the sides of the hat.

Step 5. Once you have everything cut out, solder the pieces together with some pure
tin solder and strong flux.

Step 6. Cut out tin pieces for covering the straw you will line the hat with.

Step 7. Put the straw on around the hat, and then solder the tin pieces on top, without burning the straw i might add. (or you could just tape the tin pieces on, its practically the same)

Making a tin foil hat with limited resources:

This part is for people who need or want a tin foil hat, but have certain limitations.
(hard to find tin, not enough of it, etc)

First thing i recommend:

If you have little tin, you can still make a semi-functioning hat, by getting a piece of tin (without any holes) that goes from the back of your head, to the beginning of your forehead.

Then you add as much other pieces of tin you have to the sides. (even if they have holes)
(although if you have the tin, i'd recommend patching those holes up if you can)

Things you can use instead of soldering for thin tin sheet hats:
- Hot glue (tried it myself, it works, but it can break)
- Super glue (be careful!)
- Any other kind of strong glue

Of course the advantage of pure tin solder is that it leaves very very small gaps in your hat.
(probably around 1/4th to 1/6th of a milimetre, maybe less)

Best sources of tin:

There are alternatives apart from super expensive tin foil and tin sheets, that you see on ebay.

Here i will list the best ones i have found so far:

- Slightly thicker tin foil. (requires soldering)
(usually 100cm by 10cm or something i don't remember...)

- Buffalo dental tin foil.
(better bang for your buck than lab grade tin foil)
(still pretty expensive though)

- Tin boxes/lunch boxes.
(They are a little thicker than item 1 on this list and they have to be soldered together)
(Try getting one without paint, or just remove the paint, for better seal)
(altough i don't think it really makes a difference)

- Tin ceiling sheets
(last time i checked they were cheaper than regular tin sheets)
(I do not recommend unless it's your only option, since they are quite heavy)
(also the paint is usually lead based i think)

- Also, just a heads up, old tin cans are usually only coated with tin. (not actually made of it)

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