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Re: rayovac812 post# 150211

Sunday, 03/10/2019 11:43:48 PM

Sunday, March 10, 2019 11:43:48 PM

Post# of 277660
You two. :) It’s a gem is an analogy. It’s like a diamond in the rough. Just an expression. Yes, if you take it the analogy has to match exactly, then we will need to a bit more time and increase in share price I guess. When it becomes that gem for all to see, it won’t be so hidden as it is now.

My contention would be that it was always a gem. And, for those that bought under .03 or .04 and already claimed their profits and only have less than those profits in the stock (house’s money) they already see it as a gem that can only shine brighter still.

Yes, there are always risks in life as with investing. I can think of a few that have nothing to do with quality or quantity of the product.

Risk / reward is worth it. IMO, the best I know of now.

.........
The U.S. Military Will Develop Futuristic, Special Ops "Body Suits" Using One of the Strangest Materials You've Ever Heard Of…
moth
It might look like a creature out of Star Wars, but this “super silk moth” could hold the key – and the magical DNA – to capturing a $140 billion market.

You’re looking at what we believe could be the next big biotech breakthrough.

Yes, it looks like an average silk moth.

It hatched out of a cocoon like any other silk moth… but it’s special in one critical way: This little guy created his cocoon with an incredible new kind of silk made from spider DNA.

Scientists are riveted by this new material because of its extraordinary properties…

it’s four times tougher than Kevlar…

74% stronger than steel…

absolutely bullet-proof…

and it has the elasticity and lightness of nylon.

The virtues of spider silk have been known for centuries. But until now, no one has been able to produce enough of it for industrial use.

The one time it was seriously tried, it took more than a million spiders and 70 people working for four years to make a single piece of fabric measuring 11 by 4 feet.

Not exactly cost-effective.

But now a lab in Michigan has found a way to produce spider silk another way… by inserting specific gene sequences from the golden orb-weaving spider into silkworms.

The silkworm then spins a recombinant fiber incorporating spider silk proteins.

Textiles woven from this new silk are lighter than Kevlar and not nearly as stiff as synthetic materials like high molecular weight polymers.

And unlike nylon they don't melt, making them perfect for body armor.

Imagine… all but bullet-proof special ops that can be dropped into Tehran… Damascus… even Pyongyang with the ability to move as they please for reconnaissance or retrieval…

special forces
Body armor equipped with this company’s “ballistic shootpack panels” bring our special ops closer to “Spider-Man Suits”… and they’re bringing this lab closer to exclusive defense partnerships.

These “miracle fibers” could also be extremely useful in medicine.

The human body doesn't reject this fiber like it does other materials. So the silk could be used as hair-thin sutures for nerve surgery and skin grafts.

The money has already started flowing…

This firm has landed a $1 million contract with the Army to produce a genetically modified “spider silk” for protective armor for soldiers.

Granted, it's a modest sum, but things at Kraig Biocraft Laboratories (OTCMKTS: KBLB) are progressing quickly…

The company recently announced its strongest silk to date… it’s had a breakthrough in its development cycle—creating in minutes the same amount of silk that used to take a full day to produce… it just delivered a prototype bundle of “ballistic shootpack panels” to Fort Riley for evaluation… and it’s ramped up production at its subsidiaries in Vietnam.

Investors have taken notice of these milestones… the stock better than doubled in the 6 months leading up to last fall, turning each $10,000 stake into $22,300.

How much upside do we project for a stock like this? We’re not putting a limit on it.

After all, we’re talking about a tiny company with just five employees that has the patent on a process that could make Kevlar obsolete… and disrupt the $140 billion technical fiber market.

It's a speculative play, for sure. And there are no guarantees.

But the stock is currently so cheap that you can pick up 5,000 shares for the cost of a nice dinner.

It’s the classic “asymmetric trade”—where the potential payoff so far outweighs the risk that it can make overnight millionaires.
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