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Last week, I showed you why covered call ETFs aren’t investments — they’re cashflow engines. Machines. Tools. Purpose‑built to continuously convert equity volatility into cashflow. And when you manage a fleet of them for what they produce — not their resale value — you create long‑term, sustainable income for the owner of that fleet. Video: Your CC ETFs Aren't Investments - They're Cashflow Machine Link: • CC ETFs Aren't Investments - They're CASHF... (watch before watching this video - fore better context) The last video was all about the concept — the metaphors, the analogies, the mental model behind running covered call ETFs like a business. But a metaphor only matters if it transforms how you operate in real life. So today, we’re taking the next step. We’re turning metaphor into machinery. Concept into practice. Doctrine into operation. In this video, I’m sliding open the hangar doors to my PIIverse — my real‑world fleet of 35 different covered call ETF cashflow engines. Anchors. Boosters. Juicers. Each one with a job to do. Each one with a torque rating. Each one contributing to the business goal: constant, sustainable monthly cashflow. You’ll see exactly: • How I categorize CC ETFs into Anchors, Boosters, and Juicers • How torque (yield), wear (NAV erosion), and reliability show up in real ETFs • Why some engines run cool and steady while others burn hot • How I manage risk across the entire fleet • How I use monthly cashflow to pay the owner (me) and reinvest back into the business • Why I never treat these like growth stocks • And why I do NOT worry about NAV erosion, lag, or “resale value” — because these are engines, not assets you flip. Their job is to produce cashflow, not appreciate. • How focusing on output instead of resale value creates long‑term, durable income You’ll see real examples from inside my Fleet inventory spreadsheet — real torque, real wear, real output — so you can understand exactly how these metaphors translate into day‑to‑day operation. This isn’t a portfolio - It’s a business. And these are the engines that power it. If you missed the previous video on the Cashflow Engine Doctrine, watch that first — it sets the foundation for everything you’re about to see. Then come back here and step inside the hangar with me. Let’s walk through it — engine by engine.