Where I live mason jars are around during the fall as people make fall recipe's... I have had some ideas of "McGuyvering" up some extraction rigs for ACRB as well as HBWR seeds or even Yopo seeds.
My job for many years was to design and build fixtures, machines, tools, etc. to help workers with the assembly tasks that you will find being done in most manufacturing production sites around the world. A super fun job and very rewarding. So when my interests in extractions started to grow so did my imagination. Problem is back then I could design anything and have it made and of course the company was paying for everything. Also I never had much to do with anything glass and I can imagine that you can't fabricate it as easily - or as I typed this really it is that any fabrication with glass would employ processes, methods and techniques that I am not familiar with. They could be cheap and easy to find people just like I know people that can weld steel or machine it, etc.
When I read the various techniques I guess there seems to be a few steps in the processes that can be tricky to handle such as the extraction of one fluid layer off of another layer or filtering mixtures. Again as I type the and think about it perhaps it is not as in need of help as I initially thought but it sure would be nice to have a way to very efficiently and easily sperate layers. I have learned as an engineer to never assume, always ask, test, verify. One process that is truly effective is to simply talk your way through something (kind of like what I did here) as if you are explaining it to someone, you will quickly find where your assumptions are breaking down, etc.
So again just thinking here in the moment I wonder if there are any 3D print materials that would be safe around these various solvents and mixtures commonly found in these extractions, I would have to imagine that there is, I mean damn if that technology is not advancing fast, you can 3D print metal - real metal, as strong as metal parts manufactured via traditional means. Anyway then I could see a simple valve design that could screw onto a regular soda bottle, here I am picturing a plastic soda bottle with the bottom cut off so that you can pour the mixture in or heck, just put the mix in, screw this valve in place, invert and wait for the separation. Perhaps a taper fit into the neck of a wine bottle or something similar so that we are using glass. In both cases you are basically mimicking a real separatory funnel. That would be kind of cool.
I would imagine that some other common and useful chemistry glass equipment could be mocked up and replicated for low dollars, using local items and perhaps working just as good as the real things.
Any thoughts? For me, I would enjoy designing and making this stuff as much as using it and the eventual products that come from it.
What do I know? I have been told that I come across as a genius and by others well, just a dumb ass. I feel like both at times. Mostly the dumb ass though...