Straps or Copper Cylinders, which is better?

Question:

I was told that copper cylinders are better than the straps, is this true?  Below is what he told me:

The important factor to consider is resistance to flow of current/signal into and out of the body. Our measurements have shown that resistance is so much less by many magnitudes through the hands than any other part of the body such as feet etc… Therefore we strongly recommend using the cylinders in the hands as a rule…

Answer:

Ok to be clear, he is indicating putting copper rods in the palms of the hands.
V3 straps are stainless steel also placed against the palms of the hands.
Then why is he saying “resistance is less through the hands”. and then in his next sentence ” strongly recommend using the cylinders in the hands as a rule…”

Is this not a contradiction?

People will mouth off all sorts of BS to make a sale.  The fact is our straps are such powerful conductors that we are often having issues with the incredibly strong conductivity of our straps causing rash at the point of contact.  We actually have to tell customers to “Dial it down” (V3 to 12.5v or 14.5v) when some complain about the high sensitivity issues of the straps.  Fortunately, all you have to do is drop the voltage.

This is proof of our stainless steel straps providing good conductivity of the frequencies to the body (through palms of hands or balls of feet)

According to TampaSteel Research

Stainless Steel Conductivity

Stainless steel is a relatively good conductor of electricity

Copper Conductivity

“Copper is less conductive than silver but is cheaper and commonly used as an effective conductor 

Pretty much the same.  Electricity travels through both metals as a pretty good conductor.  Perhaps not as good as silver or gold, but both metals are good enough.

Anyway his conclusion is — this is a non argument.  Either copper or stainless steel will work, and the steel is better.

Link to the Healthproducts2 Home:
DISCLAIMER

Notice: Trying to get property 'slug' of non-object in /home3/healthp2/public_html/wp-includes/taxonomy.php on line 4683

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Shopping Cart
Scroll to Top