hi, well, germs are complex proteins. in order to break those down it requires
bombarding with electrons. germs don't respond to magnetism, they are not iron
filings. but the good news is that they are altered "corroded" in a sense, by
continuous bombardment with charged particles, namely, electrons. Germs have
enzymes inside and delicate coatings on the outside. these things all have
large molecules with "active sites" on each of them. an active site is where
you have an extra electron or lack of one. this gives them ability to
chemically change in ways leading to the reproduction.
if you supply a stream of bombarding electrons you can upset these active sites,
and render the whole microbe inert to reproduction.
the only question is how many electrons, and for how long must you bombard with
them? turns out it is a sliding scale. using 3 volts you'd use about 20
minutes, 6 volts about 10 minutes, etc. no precise numbers are known (or really
needed) here. Just applying dc to the germs for some minutes between 3 and 6
volts, between 10 and 20 minutes should greatly reduce or get rid of them.
ok, now what about the pulser? It hits the body with a magnetic field and the
iron in the body becomes a magnet for the short duration. This magnet in the
body in turn creates an electric current flowing in the body. It is a very tiny
current, probably less than a volt. It only lasts a millionth of a second or
so. There is no real opportunity for swarms of electrons to hit the germs and
they live on.
But, the magnet it makes inside the body is blood-iron based, and the magnetized
blood will tend to attract itself into a clump, it will try to gather together.
As it does so, it increases pressures on nearby tissue like a small pump. This
can force lymph from areas where it sits behind "one way valves" in the lymph
nodes.
Beck used this pumping system to "rid the lymph" of HIV. That does assume the
HIV is in the fluid, not in lymphatic cells. But it is in lymphatic cells. So
the effect might be less than optimal.
Instead, applying the dc current to lymph nodes might offer a better chance to
use the principle of dc current degradation of the germs.
The only real double-blind research was done using this "electron bombardment"
approach, and we have the study, it's reduced HIV in a dish 99 percent in 3
minutes. So, I am pursuing that instead of trying to find out if a magnetic
pulser can do some other effect. I don't know if it can, but if the proven
effects are wanted, then use the proven causes. I have used magnetic pulsing
with a strong SOTA unit on my colds and sore throats with zero effects. The 6
volt battery thing (godzilla) worked like a charm time and again.
ok, enuf. Beck had bed-ridden folks who could not jump on a trampoline, so he
used his physics brain to get the lymph moving. end of story.
bG
--- In microelectricitygermkiller2@yahoogroups.com, "texan_rio" <texan_rio@...>
wrote:
>
> Oh. My. God. This makes me so angry. There are a million posts on this forum
about how to build a magnetic pulser and no one, until now, thought to mention
that they don't do what you (and I) think they do.
>
> "Soreness in nerves"? Are you kidding me? Someone, anyone, please tell me that
the magnetic pulsers at least clean out the lymphatic system (which,
incidentally, you can do with a mini trampoline unless someone wants to burst
that bubble too). They don't "work on germs"? What the f*ck is the point then?
>
> Now I know that after that rant that this is going to sound sarcastic but you
say that "the latest are truly great", how are they truly great? I really do
want to know.
>
> Anyone else out there have any insight or experience to share about the Beck
Magnetic Pulser. And I'd also like to know how the Sota Blood Purifier stacks up
against the godzilla. Are they equal in effect? Can they be used
interchangeably?
>
> Thanks,
> Rio
>
>
> --- In microelectricitygermkiller2@yahoogroups.com, "bob luhrs" <bobluhrs@>
wrote:
> >
> > The early pulsers by SOTA were ok, but...the latest are truly great.
> >
> > I use mine for soreness in nerves. It doesn't work on germs, does little if
anything. Some say it did for them, I tend to doubt it.
> > But for loosing fluids in pinched or irritated nerves, the thing is
unbelievably good. When it works, it really works.
> >
> > Use the simple dc godzilla for your germ projects, and the pulser for some
other stuff as needed.
>