The cabinet I received in the mail kept dropping my glyph of disposal, it is the heaviest of the glyphs, and I wasn't to keen on using it anyways. The layout of this cabinet is very interesting, as there an almost excessive amount of conduits, and each chamber is fairly small. Due to not using disposal, I needed to make each product twice per loop. Fortunately, the products where small, and easy to assemble in the cramp space. The hardest part of this engine to get down is the routing, minimizing the amount of conduits transfers is of extreme importance; ideally the reagents would be in the center, but the amount of conduits there makes it rather difficult to place and access the large glyph of dispersion. The symmetry of the engine (the D_2 group) significantly cut back the number of unique placements for each sub-assembly, and more or less forced me to put the quintessence in the corner. The products also need significant space to be assembled, so I also put them in the remaining corners, The metals I then placed in a more central spot, but I needed the top middle chamber for routing the quintessence, air, fire, and salt, so I placed the copper and quicksilver in the bottom middle. It was then just a simple matter of placing and programming to manufacture the elements I needed, and assembling the products. - Alchemist H. Green