The reaction chamber! Well, this is another complicated step, but if correctly done could mean TONS of time saved. You really don't need to make one, but If that nuclear company will not let you have one, I suggest you make one.





Finding a Chamber



You will need an new, sealed nuclear power plant chamber. (Used in the process of nuclear energy conversion.) To get one of these, you must go up to the owner/company and put on your biggest puppy eye face, and ask him/her if he would like to help with the discovery of something "big". If you are lucky, he/she will say yes. Or, as an alternate option, you can buy one. You will need this for the next step.



Making the Chamber



Go buy (Not find!!!) Lots and lots of concrete. And by lots, I mean about enough to cover your house with it in ten feet thick. All chambers are different sizes, and based on your budget and location you may also have to change this. You will also have to line the inside of the chamber with a pure compressed carbon or also known as RCC (Reinforced carbon-carbon) to withstand the beginning temperatures up to 3000 degrees F. You will now have to inlay the chamber with special material I call "diomonia". It is a mix of pure diamond and ceramic. Well, not PURE PURE diamond, but you get the idea. This should withstand short-term temperatures that are very hot. Since diamonds are made in high temperatures, they can withstand and help structural stability for short times. Make sure it has a layer about a few inches thick all around. When you are done, the inside should be a gray-ish white-ish color. Unlike the picture below, which is a nuclear chamber, not a black hole chamber. Unfortunately, You will probably have to replace the inner coatings on each black hole fabrication, but I don't encourage that, because I really don't want everybody making black holes all over the place.



MAKE SURE THE CHAMBER IS VACUUM SEALED!!!!