signal_line
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- Nov 14, 2011
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First off i want to make a big WARNING here: Don't be foolish and be messing with any alternating current in a rod. That means don't hook it up to a frequency generator. Look at this article scroll down to Table 4. Not a bad idea to read the article. If you have a cut or some hole in your skin the electricity can get in and electrocute you, even at low AC voltage and current. See the last line--10ma and 3 volts AC can cause uncontrollable muscles--well within the range of most all frequency generators even without an amplifier. Just a damned good reason to stay away from any rod that runs the frequency through it. One of Dell Winders' early weigh checkers had a frequency generator (555 timer) and somebody got a very painful shock so they discontinued it. "He got the Hell shocked out of him." When I first heard this I did not believe it, but I do now.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/ar..., dry hand may,salty tissues beneath the skin.
Okay, now for DC direct current. A small voltage through the rod can assist is locating. This almost certainly is how the Electroscopes work--voltage-assisted dowsing. I realize most people say there is no circuit so no electrical current. There is always a small current between a battery's poles and it is detectable by a good dowser, or maybe even not-so-good dowser. If you are holding both rods there is a circuit. You've probably seen those power packs for dowsing rods. Some probably as simple as a 9 volt battery connected to each rod--positive in the right hand, negative in the left. Now women and some people might have different polarity. I saw a picture someone had hooked up the positive pole of a AAA battery to the rod. I suspect each person has a different best voltage so you can try it yourself. The Electroscopes had a different voltage for each element.
l
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/ar..., dry hand may,salty tissues beneath the skin.
Okay, now for DC direct current. A small voltage through the rod can assist is locating. This almost certainly is how the Electroscopes work--voltage-assisted dowsing. I realize most people say there is no circuit so no electrical current. There is always a small current between a battery's poles and it is detectable by a good dowser, or maybe even not-so-good dowser. If you are holding both rods there is a circuit. You've probably seen those power packs for dowsing rods. Some probably as simple as a 9 volt battery connected to each rod--positive in the right hand, negative in the left. Now women and some people might have different polarity. I saw a picture someone had hooked up the positive pole of a AAA battery to the rod. I suspect each person has a different best voltage so you can try it yourself. The Electroscopes had a different voltage for each element.
l
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