Guest guest Posted March 30, 2009 Report Share Posted March 30, 2009 Most people will not need a complex or automated device for simple local infections, skin cancers, teeth, etc researching. The ones in our plans here work fine and for the short times you need them why get all involved? DC current does work fine, and you can use it most of the time. If you're fighting other stuff or want to do a Beck-type blood electrification experiment then the Beck type unit is good, also. However, be aware that with Hep-c the Beck device did not remove all the viral load from blood, godzilla did, we actually tested one against the other on the same person. Beck's was used an hour a day for a year. Godzilla an hour a day for 15 weeks and it reduced the load 99 percent below where it was with Beck's. Godzilla was a powerful mother-f...on hep-c in that case! I have no idea how repeatable that is, but it was very impressive, all tests done every 3 weeks showed a consistent, dramatic reduction in viral load. The ones V makes are awesome if you need long application times. It provides autoswitching, so you don't need to do any of that. However, and it's a big one: auto-switching can be painful if there's no " loading " capacitor in the output. You get a spike every once in awhile as the current goes from positive to zero to negative, and this spike is twice the operating volts, so it can be " jarring " or distracting to use. What to do. You can buy from radio shack a cheap capacitor of .1 microfarad, non-polar, or ceramic type. They are a few cents each. Add this across the output leads. In other words you splice it into both wires. The capacitor has two ends, one is attached to each output wire, anywhere along the wire will do, but you probably would use it up close to the device itself to keep it out of your way. This will bleed off charge slowly as the current reverses every 30 seconds. You can add a second one to damp it even more if you want. of course, you can turn down the power every 30 seconds just before the current reverses, but then you don't have automatic anymore, you are manually tending it yourself. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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