Hi
The genius of the "Don Croft" zapper is that it's kind of idiot proof and
very wearable with the embedded copper contacts. Some wear it all day when
in a jam. Croft climbed over a psychological barrier. The classic zapper has
copper handles to spread out the electric but you will just use it in a
session. You won't wear it for hours unless......

You take the initiative to cut two copper discs and tape them to yourself.
Use those as electrodes. But then you are ripping tape off yourself
(unpleasant) to move the electrodes to a new spot. With the Croft you can
move it at a moment's notice. The Croft has orgonite inside and other
hoopla. These are subtle energy enhancements. Do they really to enhance the
zapper? I don't know.

G








On Sun, Apr 25, 2010 at 6:48 AM, Ode Coyote <[email protected]>wrote:

>
>
>  I don't think zappers actually "electrify" the blood.
>  What they do is manufacture electrochemical byproducts according to what
> pole is ionizing [??] salt at that location.
> One pole Sodium Hydroxide, alkalizing there...the other Hypochlorus acid.
> [similar to MMS]
>  If I'm getting "Positive Offset" correctly...that would be pulsed DC.
> The frequency of the DC pulse would then be an on/off [50/50 ? ]"duty
> cycle" to allow those chemicals to migrate faster than they build up in the
> skin causing chemical burns.
>  A slower pulse would build up more before the blood in surface capillaries
> washes it in deeper and dilutes it...pretty much a matter of comfort level.
>
>  Voltage doesn't matter, it's current delivered over an area [current
> density again]
> With a higher voltage, you can deliver more current over a smaller less
> conductive area.
> How much at a given voltage depends on the conductivity of the electrolyte
> on the pads or how wet and salty your skin and the size of the electrodes
> and how far apart they are on the body.
> I'd like to see a variable resistor or a pulse width modulator that can go
> to maybe a 20/80 duty cycle to get control of that over all current.
>
> You can get red itchy skin [mild chemical burning] at only 1.2 volts...or
> no burning at 24 volts depending on how the electrodes are configured.
>
> Ode
>
>
>
>
> At 02:13 PM 4/24/2010 +0100, you wrote:
>
>> I've been seriously considering buying a zapper and am toying between
>> these two. I'd really welcome any comments. Is there any advantage to having
>> the dual frequency? I can see the timer might be a good idea.
>>
>> <
>> http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/Zapper-Dual-freqency-of-30KHZ-2-5KHZ_W0QQitemZ150430846490QQcmdZViewItemQQptZUK_Health_Beauty_Natural_AlternativeTherapies?hash=item2306608e1a
>> >
>> http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/Zapper-Dual-freqency-of-30KHZ-2-5KHZ_W0QQitemZ150430846490QQcmdZViewItemQQptZUK_Health_Beauty_Natural_AlternativeTherapies?hash=item2306608e1a
>>
>> and
>>
>> <
>> http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/Zapper-Dr-Hulda-Clark-with-built-in-electronic-timer_W0QQitemZ150433257357QQcmdZViewItemQQptZUK_Health_Beauty_Natural_AlternativeTherapies?hash=item230685578d
>> >
>> http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/Zapper-Dr-Hulda-Clark-with-built-in-electronic-timer_W0QQitemZ150433257357QQcmdZViewItemQQptZUK_Health_Beauty_Natural_AlternativeTherapies?hash=item230685578d
>>
>>
>> I've also seen a 12v zapper. Is that one any better?
>>
>> Any advice would be really welcome
>>
>> Cheers
>> Kirsteen
>>
>
>
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