Re: What is positive offset?
This is a great question. One that has been asked many times before. It is so great a question that it so far seems to defy an answer that is both conclusive and reasonable. Such is the nature of our world that it is permeated by questions that are good questions that never come with a reasonable and conclusive answer, all the way from - what is the law that says you must pay taxes?..... to - what was Creator up to on the day before "in the beginning"?.....and many many in between, you get the idea. Lotta good questions to be found out there that for the most part the world insists on churning out only iffy and dubious anwers to.
As to positive offset, some of the theory to be found out there suggests positive offset is a varying amplitude of voltage, a voltage that is kinda DC and kinda AC, that never goes negative. Never goes negative means that as the intensity wanes during each cycle from positive towards zero, it never crosses the zero threshhold into negative territory. This is the theroy. AK has provided reasonable evidence that describes how commonly found electronics, such as but not limited to IC chips and the 555 found with some Zappers, has the quirk that it does in fact go negative during each cycle of cranking out the so-called positive offset voltage.
While were at the situation, anew, of trying to solve some of the great questions and problems of the world, particularly as these questions and problems may relate to the mysteries of zapping in general and Zappers in specific, other questions do beg for conclusive and reasonable answer: do zappers in general and Zappers in specific do what they do as it applies to the effects upon pathogens only as a result of the voltage/charge, or the result of frequency/resonance, or both, or neither?