Quote:
Originally Posted by Dell Winders
You have to ask your self, if you are smart enough to learn to use L-rods to detect Magnetic fields?
...If you want to place L rods in a stationary vice that's your prerogative but it sounds like a stupid, awkward way of using them.
Be sure you connect wires to the handles and hold the ends of the wires. A human connection is used to alter the polarity of the Rod(s).
Originally posted by Qiaozhi:
A human connection is used to [unconsciously] move the rod. This is your so-called trained ideomotor effect, or (in other words) self deception.
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Hmmm....
It sounds like
Dell has suggested an actual test we can perform to prove L-rods will detect the magnetic field of objects which LRLs find...
We can attach rods in a vice and connect wires to the handles and hold the ends of the wires like Dell says.
Then we can get an assistant to wave some targets in front of the rods to see if they move.
We can try samples of the same elements which Dell says he tested on his web page: gold, silver, copper, lead, nickels, diamonds, emeralds, garnet, flint and aspirin".
We will certainly see the LRL L-rod move to follow the magnetic field of these objects....
Will it work as well as this L-rod LRL following the "magnetic field" of a gold ring we wave in front of it when there is no vice?
Now lemme see...
The force vectors go right-left, front-back, and vertical.
I wonder where the imaginary component is?
Best wishe's

J_P