There are a lot of mechanical elements to my experiences. Something that has been talked about a bunch around here that I have experienced on multiple occasions is beholding the cogs and gears of hyperspace. It looks like clockwork - all of them moving each other.
I've also talked a lot about the electronic sounds
they make, the sequences they run (both visual and audio). The audio sequences sound like a MIDI sequencer running high pitched 8-16 bit pure tones.
When they run their visual sequences, it's very characteristic of a computer program enacting an algorithm of some kind. I don't know why they like to run them. Sometimes though, even when there's fluid motion, constant "plot change" and no real sign of sequences in sight, if I were to open my eyes and something were to knock the experience "off track" as if everything was hinging on me before, and now that perhaps a sudden noise or movement can knock the thing off track, that the experience can reveal itself to be running on a sort of metronome track where everything is happening very choppily, but I believe it to be a matter of perspective that makes it appear intentionally fluid. A lot of these rather intense experiences seem "designed" to be beheld from a particular angle at a particularly stable viewpoint, and if you manage to take a peak behind the scenes, you'd see that it can be quite mechanical. I had a lesson in interdimensional geometry where they showed me that there is a visible "foreground" and a hidden latent background that helps to facilitate the illusions of folding/unfolding and moving through each other by moving some of an object into the foreground while other parts recede into the hidden background.
To me hyperspace seems to be the perfect marriage of the organic and the mechanical.
"Science without religion is lame. Religion without science is blind" - Albert Einstein
"The Mighty One appears, the horizon shines. Atum appears on the smell of his censing, the Sunshine- god has risen in the sky, the Mansion of the pyramidion is in joy and all its inmates are assembled, a voice calls out within the shrine, shouting reverberates around the Netherworld." - Egyptian Book of the Dead
"Man fears time, but time fears the Pyramids" - 9th century Arab proverb