--- In microelectricitygermkiller2@yahoogroups.com, "martin7730"
<martin7730@...> wrote:
>
> Hi BG,
>
> As you probably know Dr. Robert Beck used 36 volts applied to two
> small electrodes over the two arteries on the inside of the same
> wrist. He had his blood examined and had hospitals supply him with
> reports on their own findings and had excellent if not surprising
> results. He was very insistant that you need to supply as much as
two
> to three milliamps to the skin to get 50 or more microamps into
the
> blood which is needed to affect the pathogens in the blood
properly
> enough. He indicated that devices like Hulda Clark's was not
strong
> enough to be very effective. Most everyone knows that little power
is
> needed if you target with a sine wave the pathogen at the proper
> frequency. Using DC or fixed frequency pulses apparently requires
> more power. Do you know of any studies that low voltage DC or
pulses
> work good enough. We can all site our own positive experiences but
is
> there any real scientific evidence to back it up? The studies at
> Einstein Medical College indicate that at least 50 microamperes in
> the blood is required to affect pathogens. Can 6 volts DC applied
to
> the skin induce that kind of current in the blood?
Absolutely yes. Try it across a bum tooth, drain
sinuses, ... .
What they ALL ignore is your equivalent circuit - a
capacitor in parallel w a resistor - that gets the same
results from your supply as when you are connected. You
act like a 'low pass filter'; anything fast causes a
transient current to charge your capacitance, for Vac it
shorts it across the pads so penetration is lowered a lot.
Joe.
>
> John
>
> --- In microelectricitygermkiller2@yahoogroups.com, "baby_grand"
> <bobluhrs@> wrote:
> >
> > no, it takes a very high voltage for 5 milliseconds to open the
> pores
> > of a host cell so as to allow viral RNA/DNA to enter the cell.
It
> is
> > a lab technique, only. You don't do this anytime at home,
never!
> It
> > could stop your heart. You use 4-6 volts steady and reverse it
> every
> > few minutes, like every 5-10. That voltage should not be enuf
to
> open
> > up any cellular pores because it is not strong enough to do so.
> >
> > This theory is used to explain why the cells probably will not
> absorb
> > medications easily at these voltages. In some people, there
have
> been
> > such reactions, but it is rarely reported.
> >
> > Still, the safe thing to do is the electricity first, then take
the
> > meds after you are done. That way the least exposure to it is
> > obtained.
> >
> > bG
> >
>