Guest guest Posted April 23, 2004 Report Share Posted April 23, 2004 > Hi , I purchased the zapper a year ago and since I didn't feel anything come out of the zapper I half-heartedly concluded that it was a scam. Am I supposed to feel some type of current? > > Hi , No, generally you don't feel anything when you zap. But there are zappers, and then there are zappers. Where did you get your zapper and what kind is it? I no longer use any zapper other than the one that Dr. has her clinic patients use, the A-5 zapper. I have made and used my homemade zappers and I have purchased commercial zappers from reputable dealers, but I realized that if I want Dr. 's results (and I do) then I need to duplicate what she is doing as precisely as I can. And what she is doing with her cancer patients, is plate zapping, and has been for over 3 years. Adding a " plate " to the zapper is necessary for cancer patients to overcome the electrical insulating qualities of the high level of PCB's that Dr. 's syncrometer testing has revealed in all the cancer patients she tested. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 24, 2004 Report Share Posted April 24, 2004 The zapper output is not usually felt assuming it is the standard 9V type and used from hand to hand or foot to foot, but many people can feel 12V output when using the zapper with a 12V DC power supply instead of a 9V. I would prefer to use TENS pads instead of copper pipe handholds, but if copper pipes were being used I would follow 's advice to use saltwater soaked paper towels to cover them and never hold them directly. If using metal pipes, the output can easily be felt by briefly touching them to either side of the tongue. turf [ ] , zapper question Hi , I purchased the zapper a year ago and since I didn't feel anything come out of the zapper I half-heartedly concluded that it was a scam. Am I supposed to feel some type of current? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 24, 2004 Report Share Posted April 24, 2004 > > The zapper output is not usually felt assuming it > is the standard 9V type and used from hand to > hand or foot to foot, but many people can feel > 12V output when using the zapper with a > 12V DC power supply instead of a 9V. Hi turf and others, I think it is important that everyone here realizes that Hulda does not use or recommend a 12 volt zapper. Her syncrometer manual and updated HIV book have more info on this. She does recommend that the battery voltage never fall below 9.4 volts, however. This is critical in maintaining an effective zap. So much so, that her instructions are to purchase a voltmeter and to test the batteries before and after every 20 minute plate zap. When I was at her clinic 3 years ago, she stood there and had us run through this in front of her to be sure we got it right. If the voltage falls below 9.4 v, then she writes that the zap was not effective and it needs to be redone with adequately charged batteries. If you buy the A-5 zapper, you don't have to test the batteries, since it automatically maintains the correct voltage output and shuts off when the the output falls. Her most recent book, the HIV book, refers to the PCB levels being too high even in the hands to use the electrodes ...the only place on the body that she recommends placing the electrodes is under the feet. That is also the place where maximum pressure can be maintained, another important consideration. The only recommended electrodes are copper tubes. Plate zapping is far more effective and much more sophisticated than regular or 12 volt zapping. I would > prefer to use TENS pads instead of copper pipe > handholds, but if copper pipes were being used > I would follow 's advice to use saltwater > soaked paper towels to cover them and never hold > them directly. At least in her last 2 books, she does not recommend using salt water, just plain water. Where did you read that she recommends using salt water? She does not recommend using TENS pads, and doesn't even recommend using wriststraps...again, see the HIV book. If using > metal pipes, the output can easily be felt by > briefly touching them to either side of the tongue. She recommends using a voltmeter. As this post illustrates, there are many ways to get sidetracked from Hulda 's specific instructions. As a cancer patient, with my life on the line, I feel the need to stick close to the tested protocol. I realize there are lots of people out there experimenting with lots of modified designs, electrodes, voltages, etc. and I think that is great. But it bothers me that cancer patients who may think they bought and are using a zapper, often are unwittingly using something that has been substantially altered from 's current design. If you go to http://store.com/ and click on " zapperera.com " you can see and read about the features of the A-5 zapper that satisfies 's requirements. FWIW, I have no interest in this site. In her earlier books she used to invite her readers to experiment, so that is what many people do. But in her later books, which are written for very sick people, she recommends sticking with the methods that she refined and improved based on her repeated clinical and syncrometer testing. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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