Re: CSLasers and thinning hair

2010-05-20 Thread Dorothy Fitzpatrick
ROFLMA!!!  dee

On 20 May 2010, at 01:09, Steve G wrote:

 I tried a similar product and it worked great, at first.  I don't think the 
 directions were clear enough or were just plain wrong, since as it turns out, 
 I had some unexpected side-effects.
 
 To help others, I have posted my photo online and it can be seen here.
 
 http://www.eatonrapidsjunkbarn.com/photos/hairtonic.jpg
 
 cheers
 


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Re: CSLasers and thinning hair

2010-05-20 Thread Frank
Lisa There is a website that sells just the diodes and tells you of simple ways 
to make the device. It is a lot cheaper and there is no science in it.
I do not have the address but you can google it.
Frank 


From: Lisa 
Sent: Wednesday, May 19, 2010 3:24 PM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
Subject: RE: CSLasers and thinning hair


It's WAY out of my price range.otherwise, I'd probably buy it.

 

L

 




From: Garrick [mailto:zzen...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, May 19, 2010 6:19 PM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CSLasers and thinning hair

 

I would look at biobeam 660  for hair   660 nanometer laser

biobeam 940 uses 940 nanometer laser for deeper issues such as arthritis 
...joints etc

g






On Wed, May 19, 2010 at 4:17 PM, Lisa blacksa...@comcast.net wrote:

Hi All,

 

With intrigue I've been following the email trails on laser therapy. I am 
greatly interested in trying this out on my thinning hair patch which I believe 
is a result of a thyroid issue (which has now been resolved) OR possibly 
following the hcg diet 2 years ago. Regardless, I have this one spot in the 
front of my head which has thinned - I can't seem to tell if there's any 
improvement and would/have tried a variety of different things to fill it in. 
Since I haven't worked in two years, the lasers out there are way out my reach 
also.can anybody suggest something that I can put together at home? I do have a 
laser pointer which actually has several tips on it (which are a variety of 
shapes). Will this work? I could probably spend up to $30 on something but that 
would have to include SH. eBay has a laser comb/brush which has red and blue 
LED's.it's $50 but I'd wait to buy that if I knew it would work (it would come 
direct from hong kong).

 

Soo.do any of you brilliant minds have any ideas for me please?

 

Lisa




-- 


Gurdjieff-- How can you expect fairness and decency on a planet of sleeping 
people?





RE: CSLasers and thinning hair - low cost options and DIY info

2010-05-20 Thread Norton, Steve
I know I did not provide ant DIY info on my previous post but time was
short. So here is a little help if you want to make your own low cost
unit.

You can easily make a good unit within your 30.00 budget. For easy of
assembly I would recommend using
http://www.futurlec.com/LED/LEDCLR15.shtml at a cost of $2.90 plus $4.00
shipping. The power supply I show later can power up to 7 of the modules
so you can get more of them if you want to be able to radiate a larger
area at once. Or if radiating fingers, you could radiate both sides of
your finger(s) simultaneously. If you look online, many commercial units
use 630 nm LEDs. That wavelength gives up a very little in penetration
depth vs 660 nm while reportedly being more effective for healing than
660 nm or the higher frequency wavelengths. I know that laser diodes get
more press (and cost more) than LED based units but I don't think that
the lasers provide better performance. The unit above has 15 LEDs that
operate at 15 ma at 2 volts. That means that each LED uses 30 milliwatts
(mW) of power. Conversion efficiencies of a red Led is normally in the
45 - 50% range for current technology low power LEDs. The red laser
diodes in laser pointers are usually around 10 mW output. So you would
only need a conversion efficiency of 33.3% for 1 LED to get out the same
amount of light as a laser pointer. That means that with 33.3%
conversion efficiency the module above gives as much light output as 15
laser pointers. Not too shabby. Much older red LEDs had a conversion
efficiency of only around 20%. If the LEDs in the module are those old
LEDs, it will still provide as much light as 9 laser pointers. Sill not
too shabby. And at a much lower cost.

Now on to the power supply. 15 volts is not a convenient voltage for
batteries although you could use two 9V batteries to get 18V and then
use a series resistor to limit the current to 30 ma. But I would
recommend buying a 15V plug in power supply. One is available at
American Science  Surplus for $3.50. Adapter # 22752. See:

http://www.sciplus.com/singleItem.cfm/terms/3850


However ASS has a minimum purchase of 10.00 so you will need to buy
some additional items to get to the $10.00 minimum. Maybe you could use
some additional laser pointers:

http://www.sciplus.com/search.cfm?utm_source=internalutm_medium=search;
utm_content=cfutm_campaign=celsearchtestformfield1234567891=169formfi
eld1234567892=5formfield1234567894=term=laserbtnHand.x=17btnHand.y=7

And there is a flat shipping cost of $5.95 for orders up to $15.00 so
the lowest cost could be $16.00 to you. 

So your total cost would be around $7.00 plus $16.00 = $23.00. 

Putting the unit together will be easy. Remove the connectors from the
LED module and the power supply, expose several inches of the two wires
in each cable and strip away some of the insulation at the end of each
wire. Now connect (twist together) one wire from the power supply to one
wire from the LED module. Any wires are ok. Now connect the two
remaining wires. Insulate each connection with tape. Plug in the power
supply. If the module lights up you are done. If it does not. Just
reverse the wire connections, plug it in and the module should light up.
Note: you can do this method with the LED module ONLY because putting a
reverse voltage of 15 volts on the module will not harm it. DO NOT use
this technique with other electronic equipment.

 - Steve N


-Original Message-
From: Norton, Steve 
Sent: Wednesday, May 19, 2010 2:57 PM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: FW: CSLasers and thinning hair - low cost options


Lisa,

The following link provides some excellent technical information:

http://heelspurs.com/led.html

Since you are looking for a very low cost option here are some choices. 

You can buy one of these for $2.90 plus shipping and connect it to 15
volts DC. The wavelength of the LED is 632 nm, which is good.

http://www.futurlec.com/LED/LEDCLR15.shtml


 If you can determine pin numbers and solder wires you can wire 3 of the
following displays in series and connect them to 6 volts. This will be
complicated for someone who has not done something like this before.
They cost $1.40 each plus shipping. The wavelength of the LED is 660 nm,
which is about ideal

http://www.futurlec.com/LED/LEDM57R.shtml


A little higher in cost at $8.90, plus shipping is the following. It is
simple to connect since there are only two wires and it uses 12 VDC. The
wavelength of the LED is 630 nm, which is still good.

http://www.futurlec.com/LED/LEDMR16RD.shtml


All these low cost options use LEDs rather than laser diodes. I expected
laser diodes to be more efficient and give out more light for the
current input but from what I have found there is little difference in
efficiency. I would not hesitate to use these devices. I wouldn't bother
with blue LEDs for your application. It won't have much affect except to
look pretty.

Here are the pages that provide the prices for the options above.


RE: CSLasers and thinning hair - low cost options and DIY info

2010-05-20 Thread Lisa
Thanks Steve...you are a wealth of information!

I will re-read after the kids go to bed so I can concentrate on what I'm
reading undisturbed :o)

Lisa

-Original Message-
From: Norton, Steve [mailto:stephen.nor...@ngc.com] 
Sent: Thursday, May 20, 2010 1:35 PM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: RE: CSLasers and thinning hair - low cost options and DIY info

I know I did not provide ant DIY info on my previous post but time was
short. So here is a little help if you want to make your own low cost
unit.

You can easily make a good unit within your 30.00 budget. For easy of
assembly I would recommend using
http://www.futurlec.com/LED/LEDCLR15.shtml at a cost of $2.90 plus $4.00
shipping. The power supply I show later can power up to 7 of the modules
so you can get more of them if you want to be able to radiate a larger
area at once. Or if radiating fingers, you could radiate both sides of
your finger(s) simultaneously. If you look online, many commercial units
use 630 nm LEDs. That wavelength gives up a very little in penetration
depth vs 660 nm while reportedly being more effective for healing than
660 nm or the higher frequency wavelengths. I know that laser diodes get
more press (and cost more) than LED based units but I don't think that
the lasers provide better performance. The unit above has 15 LEDs that
operate at 15 ma at 2 volts. That means that each LED uses 30 milliwatts
(mW) of power. Conversion efficiencies of a red Led is normally in the
45 - 50% range for current technology low power LEDs. The red laser
diodes in laser pointers are usually around 10 mW output. So you would
only need a conversion efficiency of 33.3% for 1 LED to get out the same
amount of light as a laser pointer. That means that with 33.3%
conversion efficiency the module above gives as much light output as 15
laser pointers. Not too shabby. Much older red LEDs had a conversion
efficiency of only around 20%. If the LEDs in the module are those old
LEDs, it will still provide as much light as 9 laser pointers. Sill not
too shabby. And at a much lower cost.

Now on to the power supply. 15 volts is not a convenient voltage for
batteries although you could use two 9V batteries to get 18V and then
use a series resistor to limit the current to 30 ma. But I would
recommend buying a 15V plug in power supply. One is available at
American Science  Surplus for $3.50. Adapter # 22752. See:

http://www.sciplus.com/singleItem.cfm/terms/3850


However ASS has a minimum purchase of 10.00 so you will need to buy
some additional items to get to the $10.00 minimum. Maybe you could use
some additional laser pointers:

http://www.sciplus.com/search.cfm?utm_source=internalutm_medium=search;
utm_content=cfutm_campaign=celsearchtestformfield1234567891=169formfi
eld1234567892=5formfield1234567894=term=laserbtnHand.x=17btnHand.y=7

And there is a flat shipping cost of $5.95 for orders up to $15.00 so
the lowest cost could be $16.00 to you. 

So your total cost would be around $7.00 plus $16.00 = $23.00. 

Putting the unit together will be easy. Remove the connectors from the
LED module and the power supply, expose several inches of the two wires
in each cable and strip away some of the insulation at the end of each
wire. Now connect (twist together) one wire from the power supply to one
wire from the LED module. Any wires are ok. Now connect the two
remaining wires. Insulate each connection with tape. Plug in the power
supply. If the module lights up you are done. If it does not. Just
reverse the wire connections, plug it in and the module should light up.
Note: you can do this method with the LED module ONLY because putting a
reverse voltage of 15 volts on the module will not harm it. DO NOT use
this technique with other electronic equipment.

 - Steve N


-Original Message-
From: Norton, Steve 
Sent: Wednesday, May 19, 2010 2:57 PM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: FW: CSLasers and thinning hair - low cost options


Lisa,

The following link provides some excellent technical information:

http://heelspurs.com/led.html

Since you are looking for a very low cost option here are some choices. 

You can buy one of these for $2.90 plus shipping and connect it to 15
volts DC. The wavelength of the LED is 632 nm, which is good.

http://www.futurlec.com/LED/LEDCLR15.shtml


 If you can determine pin numbers and solder wires you can wire 3 of the
following displays in series and connect them to 6 volts. This will be
complicated for someone who has not done something like this before.
They cost $1.40 each plus shipping. The wavelength of the LED is 660 nm,
which is about ideal

http://www.futurlec.com/LED/LEDM57R.shtml


A little higher in cost at $8.90, plus shipping is the following. It is
simple to connect since there are only two wires and it uses 12 VDC. The
wavelength of the LED is 630 nm, which is still good.

http://www.futurlec.com/LED/LEDMR16RD.shtml


All these low cost options use LEDs rather than laser diodes. I expected
laser

RE: CSLasers and thinning hair - website

2010-05-20 Thread Norton, Steve
Is this the site?

 

http://www.overmachogrande.com/

 

-  Steve N

 

From: Frank [mailto:frankcuns-r...@comcast.net] 
Sent: Thursday, May 20, 2010 5:15 AM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CSLasers and thinning hair

 

Lisa There is a website that sells just the diodes and tells you of
simple ways to make the device. It is a lot cheaper and there is no
science in it.

I do not have the address but you can google it.

Frank 

 



Re: CSLasers and thinning hair - low cost options and DIY info

2010-05-20 Thread Garrick
Thanks for all that information on do it yourself laser. Do you see a 940 nm
laser LED that you could do the same thing with? 940 goes deeper into joints
for joints tendons arthritis etc. . Biobeam sells a 940 and a
660http://www.biobeam.cz/gbr/index.php?option=com_contenttask=viewid=39Itemid=118

Thanks
Garrick



On Thu, May 20, 2010 at 1:35 PM, Norton, Steve stephen.nor...@ngc.comwrote:

 I know I did not provide ant DIY info on my previous post but time was
 short. So here is a little help if you want to make your own low cost
 unit.

 You can easily make a good unit within your 30.00 budget. For easy of
 assembly I would recommend using
 http://www.futurlec.com/LED/LEDCLR15.shtml at a cost of $2.90 plus $4.00
 shipping. The power supply I show later can power up to 7 of the modules
 so you can get more of them if you want to be able to radiate a larger
 area at once. Or if radiating fingers, you could radiate both sides of
 your finger(s) simultaneously. If you look online, many commercial units
 use 630 nm LEDs. That wavelength gives up a very little in penetration
 depth vs 660 nm while reportedly being more effective for healing than
 660 nm or the higher frequency wavelengths. I know that laser diodes get
 more press (and cost more) than LED based units but I don't think that
 the lasers provide better performance. The unit above has 15 LEDs that
 operate at 15 ma at 2 volts. That means that each LED uses 30 milliwatts
 (mW) of power. Conversion efficiencies of a red Led is normally in the
 45 - 50% range for current technology low power LEDs. The red laser
 diodes in laser pointers are usually around 10 mW output. So you would
 only need a conversion efficiency of 33.3% for 1 LED to get out the same
 amount of light as a laser pointer. That means that with 33.3%
 conversion efficiency the module above gives as much light output as 15
 laser pointers. Not too shabby. Much older red LEDs had a conversion
 efficiency of only around 20%. If the LEDs in the module are those old
 LEDs, it will still provide as much light as 9 laser pointers. Sill not
 too shabby. And at a much lower cost.

 Now on to the power supply. 15 volts is not a convenient voltage for
 batteries although you could use two 9V batteries to get 18V and then
 use a series resistor to limit the current to 30 ma. But I would
 recommend buying a 15V plug in power supply. One is available at
 American Science  Surplus for $3.50. Adapter # 22752. See:

 http://www.sciplus.com/singleItem.cfm/terms/3850


 However ASS has a minimum purchase of 10.00 so you will need to buy
 some additional items to get to the $10.00 minimum. Maybe you could use
 some additional laser pointers:

 http://www.sciplus.com/search.cfm?utm_source=internalutm_medium=search;
 utm_content=cfutm_campaign=celsearchtestformfield1234567891=169formfi
 eld1234567892=5formfield1234567894=term=laserbtnHand.x=17btnHand.y=7http://www.sciplus.com/search.cfm?utm_source=internalutm_medium=search%0Autm_content=cfutm_campaign=celsearchtestformfield1234567891=169formfi%0Aeld1234567892=5formfield1234567894=term=laserbtnHand.x=17btnHand.y=7

 And there is a flat shipping cost of $5.95 for orders up to $15.00 so
 the lowest cost could be $16.00 to you.

 So your total cost would be around $7.00 plus $16.00 = $23.00.

 Putting the unit together will be easy. Remove the connectors from the
 LED module and the power supply, expose several inches of the two wires
 in each cable and strip away some of the insulation at the end of each
 wire. Now connect (twist together) one wire from the power supply to one
 wire from the LED module. Any wires are ok. Now connect the two
 remaining wires. Insulate each connection with tape. Plug in the power
 supply. If the module lights up you are done. If it does not. Just
 reverse the wire connections, plug it in and the module should light up.
 Note: you can do this method with the LED module ONLY because putting a
 reverse voltage of 15 volts on the module will not harm it. DO NOT use
 this technique with other electronic equipment.

  - Steve N


 -Original Message-
 From: Norton, Steve
 Sent: Wednesday, May 19, 2010 2:57 PM
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com
 Subject: FW: CSLasers and thinning hair - low cost options


 Lisa,

 The following link provides some excellent technical information:

 http://heelspurs.com/led.html

 Since you are looking for a very low cost option here are some choices.

 You can buy one of these for $2.90 plus shipping and connect it to 15
 volts DC. The wavelength of the LED is 632 nm, which is good.

 http://www.futurlec.com/LED/LEDCLR15.shtml


  If you can determine pin numbers and solder wires you can wire 3 of the
 following displays in series and connect them to 6 volts. This will be
 complicated for someone who has not done something like this before.
 They cost $1.40 each plus shipping. The wavelength of the LED is 660 nm,
 which is about ideal

 http://www.futurlec.com/LED/LEDM57R.shtml


 A little higher in 

Re: CSLasers and thinning hair - low cost options and DIY info

2010-05-20 Thread Norton, Steve

I don't know of a 940 nm laser or LED assembly like below but individual LEDs 
are not expensive:

http://www.futurlec.com/LEDInfrared.shtml

You may want to check these out. They are most likely 850 nm.
 
http://www.dealextreme.com/products.dx/category.913

http://www.mcmelectronics.com/product/28-8070


- Steve N

From: Garrick [mailto:zzen...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Thursday, May 20, 2010 4:00 PM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CSLasers and thinning hair - low cost options and DIY info

Thanks for all that information on do it yourself laser. Do you see a 940 nm 
laser LED that you could do the same thing with? 940 goes deeper into joints 
for joints tendons arthritis etc. . Biobeam sells a 940 and a 660

Thanks
Garrick

On Thu, May 20, 2010 at 1:35 PM, Norton, Steve stephen.nor...@ngc.com wrote:
I know I did not provide ant DIY info on my previous post but time was
short. So here is a little help if you want to make your own low cost
unit.

You can easily make a good unit within your 30.00 budget. For easy of
assembly I would recommend using
http://www.futurlec.com/LED/LEDCLR15.shtml at a cost of $2.90 plus $4.00
shipping. The power supply I show later can power up to 7 of the modules
so you can get more of them if you want to be able to radiate a larger
area at once. Or if radiating fingers, you could radiate both sides of
your finger(s) simultaneously. If you look online, many commercial units
use 630 nm LEDs. That wavelength gives up a very little in penetration
depth vs 660 nm while reportedly being more effective for healing than
660 nm or the higher frequency wavelengths. I know that laser diodes get
more press (and cost more) than LED based units but I don't think that
the lasers provide better performance. The unit above has 15 LEDs that
operate at 15 ma at 2 volts. That means that each LED uses 30 milliwatts
(mW) of power. Conversion efficiencies of a red Led is normally in the
45 - 50% range for current technology low power LEDs. The red laser
diodes in laser pointers are usually around 10 mW output. So you would
only need a conversion efficiency of 33.3% for 1 LED to get out the same
amount of light as a laser pointer. That means that with 33.3%
conversion efficiency the module above gives as much light output as 15
laser pointers. Not too shabby. Much older red LEDs had a conversion
efficiency of only around 20%. If the LEDs in the module are those old
LEDs, it will still provide as much light as 9 laser pointers. Sill not
too shabby. And at a much lower cost.

Now on to the power supply. 15 volts is not a convenient voltage for
batteries although you could use two 9V batteries to get 18V and then
use a series resistor to limit the current to 30 ma. But I would
recommend buying a 15V plug in power supply. One is available at
American Science  Surplus for $3.50. Adapter # 22752. See:

http://www.sciplus.com/singleItem.cfm/terms/3850


However ASS has a minimum purchase of 10.00 so you will need to buy
some additional items to get to the $10.00 minimum. Maybe you could use
some additional laser pointers:

http://www.sciplus.com/search.cfm?utm_source=internalutm_medium=search;
utm_content=cfutm_campaign=celsearchtestformfield1234567891=169formfi
eld1234567892=5formfield1234567894=term=laserbtnHand.x=17btnHand.y=7

And there is a flat shipping cost of $5.95 for orders up to $15.00 so
the lowest cost could be $16.00 to you.

So your total cost would be around $7.00 plus $16.00 = $23.00.

Putting the unit together will be easy. Remove the connectors from the
LED module and the power supply, expose several inches of the two wires
in each cable and strip away some of the insulation at the end of each
wire. Now connect (twist together) one wire from the power supply to one
wire from the LED module. Any wires are ok. Now connect the two
remaining wires. Insulate each connection with tape. Plug in the power
supply. If the module lights up you are done. If it does not. Just
reverse the wire connections, plug it in and the module should light up.
Note: you can do this method with the LED module ONLY because putting a
reverse voltage of 15 volts on the module will not harm it. DO NOT use
this technique with other electronic equipment.

 - Steve N



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Re: CSLasers and thinning hair - low cost options and DIY info

2010-05-20 Thread Tad Winiecki

Norton, Steve wrote:

I don't know of a 940 nm laser or LED assembly like below but individual LEDs 
are not expensive:

http://www.futurlec.com/LEDInfrared.shtml

You may want to check these out. They are most likely 850 nm.
 
http://www.dealextreme.com/products.dx/category.913


http://www.mcmelectronics.com/product/28-8070


- Steve N
  
I bought a 3 color array from V whom I knew from the Beck-N-Stuff 
group,  http://www.theledman.com/


He will do custom work.

Nancy


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Re: CSLasers and thinning hair - low cost options and DIY info

2010-05-20 Thread maniaka rose
this is all great information.  my hubby is reading it as fast as i
forward.  he's not balding yet, just thinning and it's been a source
of concern for years.  he is very competent in building an array of
things and is studying all the information with great joy.

thanks so much (again)

rose


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Re: CSLasers and thinning hair

2010-05-19 Thread Smitty
 my thinning hair patch . . . .can anybody suggest something that I
can put together at home?

I've been told that the only thing that will stop
falling hair , is the floor !


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Re: CSLasers and thinning hair

2010-05-19 Thread Bob Banever
Haha.  Actually, large amounts of silica (diatomaceous earth or ionic 
silica) might help alot.  I have hair growing back in after taking silica 
for awhile.


Bob
- Original Message - 
From: Smitty papad...@gmail.com

To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Wednesday, May 19, 2010 1:35 PM
Subject: Re: CSLasers and thinning hair



my thinning hair patch . . . .can anybody suggest something that I
can put together at home?


I've been told that the only thing that will stop
falling hair , is the floor !


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 Rules and Instructions: http://www.silverlist.org

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Re: CSLasers and thinning hair

2010-05-19 Thread Garrick
I would look at biobeam
660http://shop.ebay.com/i.html?_nkw=biobeam_armrs=1_from=_ipg=
for hair   660 nanometer laser

biobeam 940 uses 940 nanometer laser for deeper issues such as arthritis
...joints etc

g





On Wed, May 19, 2010 at 4:17 PM, Lisa blacksa...@comcast.net wrote:

  Hi All,



 With intrigue I’ve been following the email trails on laser therapy. I am
 greatly interested in trying this out on my thinning hair patch which I
 believe is a result of a thyroid issue (which has now been resolved) OR
 possibly following the hcg diet 2 years ago. Regardless, I have this one
 spot in the front of my head which has thinned – I can’t seem to tell if
 there’s any improvement and would/have tried a variety of different things
 to fill it in. Since I haven’t worked in two years, the lasers out there are
 way out my reach also…can anybody suggest something that I can put together
 at home? I do have a laser pointer which actually has several tips on it
 (which are a variety of shapes). Will this work? I could probably spend up
 to $30 on something but that would have to include SH. eBay has a laser
 comb/brush which has red and blue LED’s…it’s $50 but I’d wait to buy that if
 I knew it would work (it would come direct from hong kong).



 Soo…do any of you brilliant minds have any ideas for me please?



 Lisa




-- 


Gurdjieff-- How can you expect fairness and decency on a planet of sleeping
people?


RE: CSLasers and thinning hair

2010-05-19 Thread Lisa
Hi Bob,

I actually have been using silica -- nothing yet...

Lisa

-Original Message-
From: Bob Banever [mailto:bbane...@earthlink.net] 
Sent: Wednesday, May 19, 2010 5:47 PM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CSLasers and thinning hair

Haha.  Actually, large amounts of silica (diatomaceous earth or ionic 
silica) might help alot.  I have hair growing back in after taking silica 
for awhile.

Bob
- Original Message - 
From: Smitty papad...@gmail.com
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Wednesday, May 19, 2010 1:35 PM
Subject: Re: CSLasers and thinning hair


 my thinning hair patch . . . .can anybody suggest something that I
can put together at home?

 I've been told that the only thing that will stop
 falling hair , is the floor !


 --
 The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver.
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RE: CSLasers and thinning hair

2010-05-19 Thread Lisa
It's WAY out of my price range.otherwise, I'd probably buy it.

 

L

 

  _  

From: Garrick [mailto:zzen...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, May 19, 2010 6:19 PM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CSLasers and thinning hair

 

I http://shop.ebay.com/i.html?_nkw=biobeam_armrs=1_from=_ipg=  would
look at biobeam 660  for hair   660 nanometer laser

biobeam 940 uses 940 nanometer laser for deeper issues such as arthritis
...joints etc

g






On Wed, May 19, 2010 at 4:17 PM, Lisa blacksa...@comcast.net wrote:

Hi All,

 

With intrigue I've been following the email trails on laser therapy. I am
greatly interested in trying this out on my thinning hair patch which I
believe is a result of a thyroid issue (which has now been resolved) OR
possibly following the hcg diet 2 years ago. Regardless, I have this one
spot in the front of my head which has thinned - I can't seem to tell if
there's any improvement and would/have tried a variety of different things
to fill it in. Since I haven't worked in two years, the lasers out there are
way out my reach also.can anybody suggest something that I can put together
at home? I do have a laser pointer which actually has several tips on it
(which are a variety of shapes). Will this work? I could probably spend up
to $30 on something but that would have to include SH. eBay has a laser
comb/brush which has red and blue LED's.it's $50 but I'd wait to buy that if
I knew it would work (it would come direct from hong kong).

 

Soo.do any of you brilliant minds have any ideas for me please?

 

Lisa




-- 


Gurdjieff-- How can you expect fairness and decency on a planet of sleeping
people?






RE: CSLasers and thinning hair

2010-05-19 Thread Steve G
I tried a similar product and it worked great, at first.  I don't think the 
directions were clear enough or were just plain wrong, since as it turns out, I 
had some unexpected side-effects.

To help others, I have posted my photo online and it can be seen here.

http://www.eatonrapidsjunkbarn.com/photos/hairtonic.jpg

cheers

 



 




  

Re: CSLasers and thinning hair

2010-05-19 Thread cking001
You can save your hair with a sack...

Chuck
To air is human, to sit back and snicker while everyone holds their
nose is sadistic!


On 5/19/2010 4:35:48 PM, Smitty (papad...@gmail.com) wrote:
  my thinning hair patch . . . .can anybody suggest something that I
 can put together at home?
 
 I've been told that the only thing that will stop
 falling hair , is the floor !
 
 


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RE: CSLasers and thinning hair

2010-05-19 Thread cking001
Nice beard...

Chuck
In ten minutes, the Joker poison on your Batman memorabilia will be
activated


On 5/19/2010 8:09:48 PM, Steve G (chube...@yahoo.com) wrote:
 I tried a similar product and it worked great, at first. I don't think the 
 directions were clear enough or were just plain wrong, since as it turns out, 
 I had some unexpected side-effects.
 
 To help others, I have posted my photo online and it can be seen here.
 
 http://www.eatonrapidsjunkbarn.com/photos/hairtonic.jpg
 
 cheers


--
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  Rules and Instructions: http://www.silverlist.org

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  mailto:silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com?subject=unsubscribe
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