Kelran smiled slightly, acknowledging Codys efforts to rectify his mistakes.
"Cody's suggestion is likely the wisest. In a confined space agility and precision will serve us better than brute force. of course that doesnt mean it should be left out of the equation either.
Speaking of which, you two were there, how big an explosion would we need to not only damage the generator beyond repair, but if possible, make removal of the wreckage and installation of a new one more difficult?
A rough guess will do fine... we just need to know how many iso-krens (one is about half an iso-ton) of charge to push for."
Kelran spent the time he was talking working over a coil of leftover copper wire from his bi-to-trinary converter, and some bits of quartz and excess aluminum from the golf cart roof.
He coiled the copper wire into a triple helix shape, then used his tools to apply delta radiation until it stiffened and turned a faintly luminescent blue. Then he melted the aluminum into a cylinder around it, packed the quartz loosely into the cylinder with the helix of copper-turned-niobium, melted the alumin into a cap, then applied intense gamma radiation to the whole thing until it glowed white hot.
"I really need a water basin for cooling my projects. Well have to wait ten minutes for it to return to room temprature, lets see what kind of connection jacks you have on your computer."
The new antenna only needed to be wired to a conductive part of the computer that produced electricty in order to work. No special drivers software or complex hookups necessary.
Kelran settled on the USB ports since they produced power according to Nichole, and he quickly fahsioned a crude but workable connector.