Quote:
Originally Posted by Dell Winders
Again, I had nothing to do with the design or manufacture of the product you show in your photos, nor was it ever manufactured for me. I don't take credit for someone else work.
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Oh really....
So you only sold it with your Dell Omnitron label on it to unsuspecting customers?
Were they supposed to believe it is your product because you sold it with your brand name? Or were they supposed to believe it was some evil product made by an EE using hot melt glue?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dell Winders
Give yourself a reality check. Show me where on this forum you are naming names, products, and attacking fellow electronics people?
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Haven't we told the real story about Dell Winders and his shady dealings with Vernon Rose in this forum? You haven't read the story about selling this junk to your customers with your own Omnitron label on it, that did not even work to find treasure for you?
You want us to believe you never read this? --->
http://www.geotech1.com/forums/showthread.php?p=73299
Tell us Dell, Who did design and manufacture the Dell VR 800 Omnitron System II anomaly qualifier?
Didn't you sell non-working junk electronic LRLs designed by an EE.
Wasn't it an EE named Vernon Rose?
Vernon Rose was a TV repairman trained at the Motorola school to repair televisions. When people were becoming interested in long range metal detectors, Vernon Rose made a simple signal generator with a 555 timer and frequency adjustment pots as seen in the photos of the VR-800. There was no power amplifier. A handheld receiver utilizing a coil was carried out in front of where the transmitter was set up with the intent to find a change in received signal when near a treasure. The VR-800 was shown to be a non-working device by Carl's report here:
http://geotech1.com/cgi-bin/pages/co...r800/index.dat
OK, Dell,
I showed you where Carl and I named names, products, and electronics people.
Now it's your turn:
1. Take a close look at the label on the picture below: Whose trademark do you see on the electronic LRL? Is it the Dell Omnitron label?
2. Isn't it true that you sold the electronic LRL shown in the picture with the Dell V.R. 800 Omnitron label on it?
3. Isn't it true that Vernon Rose designed and built these electronic LRLs that you sold for well over a couple thousand dollars?
4. Isn't it true that I named Vernon Rose as the person who manufactured this electronic junk LRL?
5. Isn't it true that Carl posted a complete expose and report on the electronic LRL designed and built by Vernon Rose?
6. Isn't it outright fraud to sell merchandise with your label on it that you know doesn't work?
It seems that the claims Dell just posted in his post above are all false.
The appearance is that Dell uses "pretend truth" when he makes statements in this forum.
Maybe he pretends that he never lies.
Best wishes.
J_P