OK I believe you. Multimeter proves it works on plastics and nonconducting material by parhat ..... Energized Water Support Forum
Date: 10/23/2004 2:13:15 PM ( 20 y ago)
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URL: https://www.curezone.org/forums/fm.asp?i=568840
I regularly used multimeter to make negatively charge water. But my method is different from you. As to my previous disagreement on plastic being non conductance, I was wrong. To test out this theory,
I used a Yugo multimeter set on millivolts and put in both probes in the water. Using the positive wire on a 2 D batteries (2 1 1/2 volt batteries ). While plastic should not have conductance, it shows it does however in millivolts. Presently it is measuring at a steady negative 15.6 millivolts for the last 6 minutes. It peaked at 16 millivolts 3 minutes ago.
When I tested the negative wires inside, I get a lower negative, sometimes a positive readings. Clove oil in water seems to get maximum negative charge at -20 to -40 millivolts. The largest I have seen yet.
To get an objective multimeter readings, do not touch the probes but leave it in the plastic container, otherwise your body will screw up the readings. A fact that I have been struggling for a week.
The idea that you leave it for 2 seconds will cause wild readings on multimeter, but mostly on a negative voltages. A better more reliable method is just to leave the positive wire in the water for a couple of minutes minimum. And in fact, for some reason if positive wire and negative wires are located on the opposite ends, they seem to work better. Leaving them too long might get a lower readings. Optimal time seems to be about 3 minutes, not a couple of seconds. At least this is my findings.
Just to show you how unhealthy my water is, my bathroom water is a positive 150 millivolts. Of course a couple of drops of Hydrochloric acid will reduce that positive 150 millivolt into a near zero millivolts.
So don't take this finding too seriously, it is based on my own filtered water.
Parhatsathid
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I used a Yugo multimeter set on millivolts and put in both probes in the water. Using the positive wire on a 2 D batteries (2 1 1/2 volt materies). As there is no conductances, however in millivolts, there is conductance. Presently it is measuring at a steat -15.6 millivolts for the last 10 minutes. It peaked at 16 millivolts 5 minutes ago.
When I tested the negative wires inside, I get a lower negative, sometimes a positive readings.
To get an objective multimeter readings, do not touch the probes but leave it in the plastic container, otherwise your body will screw up the readings. A fact that I have been struggling for a week.
The idea that you leave it for 2 seconds will cause wild readings on multimeter, but mostly on a negative voltages. A better more reliable method is just to leave the positive wire in the water for a couple of minutes minimum. And in fact, for some reason if positive wire and negative wires are located on the opposite ends, they seem to work better. Leaving them too long might get a lower readings. Optimal time seems to be about 3 minutes, not a couple of seconds. At least this is my findings.
Parhatsathid
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