ABOUT DAN DIAL
Dan Dial’s life has been driven by the desire to understand the behavior and interaction of energy and matter, then design machines that maximize that effect.
His interest in electronics began in 1963 at the age of 5 reading Popular Electronics and performing their experiments and by 1968 Dan was repairing radios and televisions. By 1969 he had read Nicola Tesla’s patent file histories, built his first Tesla coil, and was conducting high-energy experiments.
In 1977 with the death of his father Dan’s college plans were put on hold to take care of his mother and grandmother. In 1977 he opened Mill Creek Enterprises (now DCD Enterprises Inc.), a custom welding/fabrication and machine shop where he could also conduct his research.
Among the many projects Dan oversaw during those early years, was being the Chief Engineer on the construction of three 42 by 15 foot aluminum crabbing ships, which he fitted, wired and plumbed.
The research on drag this project provided was used later in Dans pump and turbine patents.
In 1997, Dan was granted the first of his 11 patents.
During the 1980s, Dan studied glass fusing and the art of bending neon at the Pilchuk Glass School in Washington State, enabling him to fabricate the glass components he needed to continue his high-energy experiments. In 1986, he opened a neon studio specializing in custom art and commercial work that continues today.
One of Dans ongoing projects during the late 1970s and early 1980s was the development of a multiple wave oscillator called the Molecular Enhancer. It was designed to produce electromagnetic multiple waveforms that resonate with the genetic structure to “power up” the processes of the cells.
Based on the benefits Dan observed over the years from the Molecular Enhancer he expanded his research and started redesigning a common Tesla coil design. His objective was to create a Tesla “like” coil for human and animal use mimicking the waveforms the Molecular Enhancer produces but at a higher octave.
7 prototypes latter Dan had this new coil, now called the Tesla-Dial Coil or TDC. One of the original TDCs is in his shop where it gets used by animals and people alike. Dan’s horses and dogs will come into the shop on their own to stand or lay in front of the TDC when they have physical issues.
Over the past four decades Dan has expanded his knowledge and skill-set as a self-taught engineer, quantum physicist, machinist, electrician, welder, neon artist and gardener.
Dan lives and works in Washington State where he continues his work in the study of energy and its interactions with matter. He regularly consults and generates solutions for high energy devices that have design issues.