CS>Re: CS/blood electrification

2018-08-01 Thread Phil Morrison
@MaryAnn FYI ... references Bob Beck still keeps a good web site. Also Google Bob Beck with specific app for long lists of references. But I found Bob Beck youtube videos my best source of information. Phil

Re: CS>Re: CS/blood electrification

2018-08-01 Thread Ode Coyote
Electrons do not enter the bloodstream. No free electrons can exist in a liquid...they are transported by electro chemical reactions...'piggybacking' on ionic compounds. What happens is that the salt in your blood is split into Sodium Hydroxide and Hypochlorous Acid, changing the PH of your blood

Re: CS>Re: CS/blood electrification

2018-08-01 Thread Victor Cozzetto
No no, don't put bare metal on your skin ;-) The Sota devices come with cotton pads that you can wet or put gel on. It does burn your skin a bit if you are not careful. The full design of all the devices are available on the site here: https://www.bobbeck.com/pdfs/build-your-own.pdf That was

Re: CS>electronic blood purifiers

2018-08-01 Thread Victor Cozzetto
Hi Ron, Yea, the Beck blood electrification devices only get the blood. In fact, it was decided to do both leads on one wrist to prevent electricity from traveling through the body and potentially affecting pace makers and such. Thus the blood is electrified as it passes the wrist... and all

Re: CS>Re: CS/blood electrification

2018-08-01 Thread Reid Harvey
Good! About the electrodes at the wrist... bare wire if I remember correctly... what current is put through, presumably from batteries, and what size? On Wed, Aug 1, 2018 at 10:44 AM, Victor Cozzetto wrote: > Yes, that is the gist of it Reid. > The impact on our blood is more complex, and it

Re: CS>Re: CS/blood electrification

2018-08-01 Thread Victor Cozzetto
Yes, that is the gist of it Reid. The impact on our blood is more complex, and it should never be done with any type of drugs in the body, including things like caffein. The reason being that it could unpredictably magnify the impact of any drugs. Read about it on his site here:

CS>electronic blood purifiers

2018-08-01 Thread Ron
Google -  square wave electronic blood purifier  - This was near top: https://altered-states.net/barry/bobbeck/differences.htm Ron [snippet) In any event, to get back to the task at hand, how do these devices differ and do you need to use all three of them? In short, they are different in

Re: CS>Re: CS/blood electrification

2018-08-01 Thread Reid Harvey
If I might chime in I'm recalling conversation from ten years or more ago. Two electrodes wrapped in gauze would be placed on either side of the artery at one's wrist, with a small current, such that electrons get into the blood stream. Sorry I can't remember some of the details, such as the

Re: CS>Re: CS/blood electrification

2018-08-01 Thread MaryAnn Helland
Where can I learn more about this, Phil? On Tuesday, July 31, 2018 11:42 PM, Phil Morrison wrote: Blood electrification operates on a periodic square wave platform. Rivitive and the like operate on a periodic sine wave function.  These are totally different waveforms ... no