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  • #31
    I will begin to get interested in L rods the day they will be perfectly ballanced, so it will be impossible to willingly make them point to the ground .

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    • #32
      Originally posted by Mike(Mont) View Post
      The one I am using now is more sensitive than my old Ranger Tell Examiner, and I don't even have the jeweled bearings on it.
      In what way is it more sensitive than a Ranger Tell Examiner? Do you mean that it's easier to detect gravity?

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      • #33
        Originally posted by Qiaozhi View Post
        In what way is it more sensitive than a Ranger Tell Examiner? Do you mean that it's easier to detect gravity?
        The thickier the rods the more sensitive they are...The new ones (being researched right now) will be lead rods .Gold rods are for experts only, and uranium rods have the tendency to "blue flash" you if you look to closely at them.
        Regards,
        Fred.

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        • #34
          If you can't dowse, then this is a non-issue. As I said, the rod will hesitate like some resistance that tries to stop it from sweeping through the edge of the target's field. Most rods with bushings or bearings will have places where they hang up, where the bearings sieze. If fact some people like this, I do not. Sure it makes it easier to hold the rod still until something strong enough breaks it away. This is good for beginners as a training rod. Solid handle rods don't have bearing trouble but are no where near as sensitive. They do allow you to tilt the handle in the opposite direction to load-up the rod. Sensitivity is not always good. In windy weather, a sensitive rod is useless, so the extremely sensitive rod is not a do-it-all rod but you can learn things with one.

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          • #35
            Is that so?
            I have a solution:just include your rod in a plastic , teflon or wood disc, then wind will have no more influence on it.
            You can even sell this new generation high tech stuff a few thousands dollars more...
            Fred.

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            • #36
              The absolute plain-Jane model will have an introductory price of $50, but it's a couple weeks away. In a way, the rod is a trainer because it teaches you things.

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              • #37
                Originally posted by Mike(Mont) View Post
                As I said, the rod will hesitate like some resistance that tries to stop it from sweeping through the edge of the target's field.
                For your information, that "bump" or hesitation is caused strictly by the ideomotor response, which was produced from within the mind of the dowser. It's like the mind says, "I think this is the right direction to the target." On subsequent sweeps, the rod will actually lock on that direction, which is another way that the mind confirms the direction of the target.

                Unfortunately, locations found in this manner (dowsing) will only produce a viable target with the same success rate as random guessing.

                It doesn't matter if you use the highest priced dowsing wand from Fitzgerald, or Dell's X-Scan, or your new scam dowsing wand, or a bent coat hanger ---the results will always be the same; just like random guessing.

                The Wallet-Miner's Creed
                Why bother with the truth, when it doesn't suit the argument?

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                • #38
                  Well, thanks for the suggestions on a name for the rod, but somehow I don't think "random chance scam rod" has a positive aura about it. Right now I'm leaning towards "The Aero Rod" because the action is so smooth it is like it is flying (it's not). Of course there is some friction/drag, but most of that is from the air resistance to the rod itself. There's no other rod like it and I believe it will set a world standard.

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                  • #39
                    Originally posted by Mike(Mont) View Post
                    Well, thanks for the suggestions on a name for the rod, but somehow I don't think "random chance scam rod" has a positive aura about it. Right now I'm leaning towards "The Aero Rod" because the action is so smooth it is like it is flying (it's not). Of course there is some friction/drag, but most of that is from the air resistance to the rod itself. There's no other rod like it and I believe it will set a world standard.
                    Would this be a world standard in dowsing rods, or paint rollers? Will Sherwin-Williams be a distributor?

                    The Wallet-Miner's Creed
                    Why bother with the truth, when it doesn't suit the argument?

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Originally posted by Mike(Mont) View Post
                      The absolute plain-Jane model will have an introductory price of $50, but it's a couple weeks away. In a way, the rod is a trainer because it teaches you things.
                      Hi,
                      Who is Jane?

                      Fred

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Originally posted by Mike(Mont) View Post
                        In a way, the rod is a trainer because it teaches you things.
                        Yeah, for those who haven't learned by now what a scam dowsing rod looks like, it teaches them how to waste $50 bucks on a contraption that will produce the same results as a bent coat hanger (or just random guessing).

                        I'd call that a real learning tool.

                        The Wallet-Miner's Creed
                        Why bother with the truth, when it doesn't suit the argument?

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          Originally posted by Mike(Mont)
                          Right now I'm leaning towards "The Aero Rod" because the action is so smooth it is like it is flying (it's not). Of course there is some friction/drag, but most of that is from the air resistance to the rod itself.
                          So smooth it's like flying?
                          Hey..!!!
                          There are painters all over the world who are just sick and tired of their paint rollers seizing up right in the middle of a roller stroke on a wall. Do you realize the significance of a roller with a bearing so smooth it is like it is flying? What do you think a pro painter would pay for a roller that doesn't seize up? how about a case of rollers that don't seize up? Or thousands of units per month for the large distributors?

                          What do you think Purdy Corporation International would pay for thousands of these paint rollers... (oops I mean dowsing rods) that are smooth as flying? Hey... forget dowsing for treasure, the real treasure is in a huge contract with the painting accessory distributors!

                          Best wishes,
                          J_P

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            The Aero Rod will set a world standard for dowsing rods in smoothness of motion in the bearings. Yes, at this point, the basic economy model is not an LRL. I use it with a transmitter like the X-Scan to indicate the signal line. $50 is the give-away price. If I was to pay someone to build them, I'd lose money.

                            Comment


                            • #44
                              Originally posted by Mike(Mont) View Post
                              The Aero Rod will set a world standard for dowsing rods in smoothness of motion in the bearings. Yes, at this point, the basic economy model is not an LRL. I use it with a transmitter like the X-Scan to indicate the signal line. $50 is the give-away price. If I was to pay someone to build them, I'd lose money.
                              Not an LRL! If it's not an LRL than it must be a paint roller.

                              You see, LRL stands for Long Range Locator, and that term encompasses all gadgets, devices and contraptions that operate by the rules of dowsing. It matters not if the device is a simple swing rod with no handle, or the most expensive "locating" contraption (complete with L-rods) from Fitzgerald --it is still an LRL, and it still indicates after an ideomotor response is generated by the dowser holding it.

                              Incidentally, the term "signal line" is often used to explain the link between the dowser and the sought after target. It is discussed AS IF there were some kind of physical "line" of energy or radiation. Nothing could be further from the truth. The existence of "signal lines" is, and always has been, just a concoction of some scam LRL salesman to make it seem like there is something physical going on in the ground. It is a total hoax and nothing more than a figment of your imagination.

                              Gravity is the ONLY thing any LRL can detect, and in most cases it does a really nice job of it.

                              The Wallet-Miner's Creed
                              Why bother with the truth, when it doesn't suit the argument?

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                I have an old Fitz rod and it does have a nice set of bearings but it's not as responsive. The Aero Rod's bearings remind me of driving on pure ice. It's hard to get traction enough to get your ideomotor started. Although the bearings are not perfectly friction free, they never hang up/seize.

                                There are lot of people who disagree with your opinion on signal lines. Hey did you hear Chapman got denied his parole today?

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