AMPLI5 Wrist band does it really work?

fechter

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From their web site:
http://www.amplifive.com/science/

Electrical frequency is being measured by the counting of the number of occurrences of a repeating current flow per second. This unit is called Hertz (Hz) and for convenience it is defined in multiplying units like: KHz, MHz, GHz and THz. When referring to living organisms the proper frequency measuring unit is MHz Megahertz which equals to 106 Hz.

It has also been discovered that the general human healthy frequency is within the range of 62-72 Hz and when it drops to lower levels it enables the appearance of variety of diseases. When the frequency drops, the immune system is compromised. For example at the level of 58 Hz, diseases like cold and flu were more likely to appear. On much lower levels (42 Hz) Cancer appeared in humans. Scientists started exploring other elements besides sheer frequency i.e. the Hz measurement. With many diseases the waveform and wavelength sweep had made a tremendous difference in the overall impact. Pathogens have a low frequency. Pollutants - both particulate and radiation (EMF) - lower a healthy frequency. Processed and canned food having a frequency of zero can greatly diminish a person's own frequency.

I'm sorry but 1 MHz does not equal 106 Hz. This sounds completely bogus and without any scientific basis.
It may work by placebo effect, which can have real measurable benefits. If you think it works, it does (sort of).
I've seen many similar claims made for devices containing magnets.
 
I was going to reply and mention I have mine hanging from my energy crystal around my neck, but seen this was not toxic discussion and did not want to derail.

Like most things in life if these actually worked everyone would have one not just the suckers.

Sorry to derail.
 
These are gimmicks and do nothing. A few companies have had lawsuits against them for false advertising and they've never shown any legitimate effects in double blind studies. See also, 'James Randi'
 
It doesn't matter
It's placebo. It has zero effect whether it's a tiny useless magnet or not. Go buy some elastic bands, they make cheaper bracelets and you can use them for more things.
It sounds like you really really want them to be true
 
I woke today aware of my wrist band. It must of been vibrating. After 20 mins contemplating the need for tea, more sleep or masturbating, I had a look. It was grinning big time, having just slept like a hero. The activity counters had reset and started running 20 mins ago, and it really was time to get up.

It watches what I do in the day, and knows if I'm going to need more or less sleep than usual. Sleep it monitors, to wake me at the right moment. To keep to my schedule, while getting as much rest as possible. Telling me each morning if I slept well or not. Like if I needed more sleep, but my alarm clock got me up, it would look pissed off at me.

When I first wore it, I did a 48 hour stint at work, then slept naturally for 5 hours as is normal after a long day. It didn't know what was happening, and thought I had not slept. Only a typical length day and typical 8-12 hours sleep got it syncronised.


Yes, if I stop up longer, I sleep less. This is why I'm wearing it. To log and trim my sleep patterns.
 
Anecdotes aren't part of the scientific method. Proof is in double-blind testing (which has been done), not asking random people.

http://archive.randi.org/site/index.php/swift-blog/2218-copper-and-magnetic-bracelets-do-not-work-for-rheumatoid-arthritis.html
http://archive.randi.org/site/index.php/swift-blog/741-copper-and-magnetic-bracelets-useless.html
http://archive.randi.org/site/index.php/swift-blog/910-ow-to-debunk-biomagnet-therapy-in-less-than-a-minute.html
http://www.livescience.com/40174-magnetic-therapy.html
http://www.sillybeliefs.com/magnets.html
http://health.ninemsn.com.au/whatsgoodforyou/theshow/694375/does-magnetic-therapy-work
http://archive.randi.org/site/index.php/swift-blog/1834-carrie-poppy.html
 
I've done a lot of research on the effects of magnets on the human body. You can see some of my patents here:

http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-...NNM&co1=AND&TERM2=harrison&FIELD2=INNM&d=PTXT

Static magnetic fields, even really strong ones, have basically no effect on the body. If you take a moving conductor (blood) and pass it through a magnetic field, it generates electricity. At the typical velocity of blood, even in the most powerful MRI scanner, the voltages produced by this effect are barely measurable and have no detectable influence on the body. We're talking 5T magnetic fields, which is many times stronger than what you could get with a N55 grade magnet.

We basically had to prove to the FDA that implanted magnets would not cause any harm. Just stay away from that MRI machine.
 
Kiriakos GR said:
What I need some one to verify for me, is if this metal ring over it has any magnetic properties?
If you really want to know, you could go get the proper test equipment for that kind of measurement, and do the tests yourself.

Otherwise you are trusting someone anonymous on the internet whose qualifications and equipment calibrations you can't verify.

Given your previous statements and temperament, I have a hard time believing you would do that.
 
You dummy....a magnet will attract a magnet if there's already a magnet in there...if there's no magnet in there then your magnet is going to attract the steel clasp.
Test with a piece of steel
 
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