Engineering Zen: Insights on Oil Storage, Time Illusions, and the Self-Righting 3D Object | June 20 2026, 14:50

I’d like to remind you that I have a group called “Engineering Zen” on Facebook and Telegram, which in recent days has featured content about:

1) the structure of oil storage facilities and what that lid flying over Moscow was all about

2) the “stopped clock” illusion, experienced by everyone but understood by almost no one.

3) about the 3D monostable, which always rights itself no matter how it’s placed. It was first proven mathematically, then constructed.

Join us so you don’t miss out on much more intriguing content. I am particularly concerned about Telegram — somehow 37 guests showed up, but as I understand it, they won’t keep coming by themselves, and with such a small audience, I fear I won’t have enough motivation to write regularly. Let’s at least push it to 50, then the motivation will be somewhat better. “Engineering Zen”, @engineersdzen

The Secrets of Painting and Maintaining a Water Tower | June 05 2026, 20:02

Why does the water tower (next to the house) have a tent during the day in thirty-degree heat, but not at night? That’s what I thought too. It turns out – I thought wrong.

It turns out that the tent is temporary, necessary for painting the tower. Once painted, it will be removed. At night, the paint is aired out and dries.

By the way, the tower is metallic, which means it changes size with temperature fluctuations. Hence, the paint is elastic.

Interestingly, how they check if everything has been covered with paint (because otherwise it will start rusting). They use a method, amusingly still called Holiday Detection since the early days of shipbuilding, which is essentially spark testing for defects.

A specialist takes a device that looks like a mop with a metal brush, to which a high voltage is applied (up to several thousand volts). Since dry epoxy resin is a dielectric and the steel wall behind it is a conductor, the inspector slowly moves the brush over the freshly painted wall. If there is even the slightest microscopic defect in the coating, the electrical circuit is completed, a loud beep sounds and a spark jumps. This spot is immediately marked and repainted.

Also, by the way, just in case someone didn’t know, these towers don’t even come close to creating enough pressure for the water to reach your faucet. They act as accumulators, softening the uneven consumption. And at the same time, they serve as a shock absorber.

And another interesting fact is that in the northern states the problem is not with heating but with freezing in the winter. A layer of ice forms on the surface and along the walls, comparable to a meter or two in thickness. And there, they really do have water heaters.

Exploring the “Christmas Tree” in Oil & Gas | December 18 2025, 18:34

Oh, how many wonderful discoveries the spirit of enlightenment brings…

it turns out, Christmas tree in the oil & gas industry is a wellhead equipment. I am testing this search for work

Gold and Gadgets: Tracing Global Influence and Metal Monopolies | October 14 2025, 03:13

Rajesh Exports states on their website that they process 35% of the gold mined on the planet. Of course, they are exaggerating, but overall, India and Rajesh do shape the market. It turns out that 11% of all the gold on the planet is adorned on Indian women. Additionally, it was found that in 1947, 70% of all mined gold was in the USA. From 1934 to 1970, it was legally prohibited for private individuals to own gold in the USA. Approximately 22% of all the gold ever accounted for on the surface of the Earth has been mined from a plateau in South Africa called the Witwatersrand. And if you consider all the gold mined throughout history, it would amount to less than an Olympic swimming pool.

China buys up silver, with India not far behind. Interestingly, platinum is significantly used in the production of catalytic converters for vehicles – almost 40% of the global production goes there. China, of course, holds much of this production.

Practically every smartphone, tablet, or touchscreen monitor that we use is coated with a thin layer of indium tin oxide (ITO). This material has a unique combination of properties: it is almost completely transparent while also conducting electricity excellently. This allows the screen to register your touches.

Although lithium is now strongly associated with batteries, historically and still today, a significant portion of it is used in the production of glass and ceramics.