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Re: 12 Volt battery design

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sure, you could use a limiting resistor such as 15k-22k, any wattage will do.

It would be best to use a meter in the circuit so you can tell what the output

is. If you are going to that much, also put a 100k ohm linear potentiometer in

the circuit. All these parts, the limit resistor, the pot, the meter can all

go into one of the electrode wires in series. It's really simple.

Using a car battery, you could treat a village using multiple electrodes all at

the same time. You would only need the potentiometer and meter in one place

and control it for everyone from the same dial.

Each pair of electrodes would get one wire from the " plain " side, and one from

below the " fancy " side with the meter and potentiometer in it. But each of

these wires would need the limiting resistor in it. So for 10 people you need

10 resistors of about 15k-22k ohms. They are cheap. This will assure that no

single set of wires can develop more than a safe range of current.

So, you put a wire to a bunch of wires, and one side (either) of battery. The

other one goes to your potentiometer and meter lineup. And from the meter, a

wire goes to another bunch of wires, in which each wire has its own limiter

resistor. Each person gets one wire from each bunch.

Draw this out and it will make sense.

Each person adds some load to the system, so the meter would be read by how many

people using it. The range for each person would still be as it would for

individuals: .3mA-.7mA. So if you had two people using it, the range would be

..6mA-1.4mA. Ten people would be 3mA-7mA. The meter will count up the total

current, and it should be similar for each person. There will be stronger and

weaker variances per person based on their own bodies resistances, and the

wetness or use of baking soda on sponges, but we still would see about the right

effects.

bG

>

> I have not built a godzilla yet, but plan to for my HCV, but I was wondering

if it could be possible to build one using a 12 volt battery, instead of the 6

volt design ~ Could resisters or something throttle a 12 volt down to a 6 volt

output?

>

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don't confuse the size of battery and the volts. car batteries have huge

currents across dead shorts, or low resistance devices, such as starting motors.

But across the body, you have thousands of ohms resistance. the volts, divided

by the ohms gives you the resulting current in the body.

So 8 x 1.5 volt batteries, any size AAA AA C D, connected in series with the +

and connected to the -, this will give you 12 volts. if you use on the body,

you get 12/2000 = .6mA.

If you use a car battery you get: 12/2000 = .6mA, exactly the same.

If you connect 8 x 12 volt car batteries in parallel (all + to all +, all - to

all - ) you get 12/2000 = .6mA, still 12 volts, still the same.

As long as resistance of the body is constant, and voltage is constant, the

current is constant.

bG

> >

> > I have not built a godzilla yet, but plan to for my HCV, but I was wondering

if it could be possible to build one using a 12 volt battery, instead of the 6

volt design ~ Could resisters or something throttle a 12 volt down to a 6 volt

output?

> >

>

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sorry should be 6mA, not .6mA. the point is the same. Using sponges introduces

another 10x resistance here.

bG

> > >

> > > I have not built a godzilla yet, but plan to for my HCV, but I was

wondering if it could be possible to build one using a 12 volt battery, instead

of the 6 volt design ~ Could resisters or something throttle a 12 volt down to a

6 volt output?

> > >

> >

>

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Tried to answer this from inbox, but don't think it went thru..

Anyway, thank you BG for this info. though I can see that I have some learning

to do about how to do all this with a 12 volt battery, in the meanwhile, I got a

few of the 6 volt batt. but couldn't find the large sponges, so will have to

look around for those.. I do have an Empi 300 Ten's machine that uses 2 AA

batteries, so wondering if the stick-on 2 " round pads might work,

There is 2 of these pads that attaches to each lead, so there could be 2 pads

on the liver and two pads on my back, so if I understand your picture design

rightfully, I'd just wire these up with my meter to the 6 volt battery?

What are your thoughts about using stick-on pads verses the sponges?

Do you know what the uA or mA should be with an 8 hr. treatment for the liver?

Thank you!!!!

Sorry so many questions, but after searching for over 2 weeks on the net, there

are very little info. out there that I understand anyway..

> > > >

> > > > I have not built a godzilla yet, but plan to for my HCV, but I was

wondering if it could be possible to build one using a 12 volt battery, instead

of the 6 volt design ~ Could resisters or something throttle a 12 volt down to a

6 volt output?

> > > >

> > >

> >

>

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don't use round electrodes, just wrap cloth around the wires and place over the

arteries of wrists, assuming healthy heart and no pacemaker, or other electric

implants. like i say, you should get a meter, see the godzilla metered model

and make one of them. add a second set of electrodes for the wrists and use the

sponges over the liver in front and in back while you also do wrists or ankles.

give them a rest, don't do all wrists or all ankles in the same day. do at

least 2 sessions a day of about 20-30 minutes. Watch for dieoff flulike

symptoms and cut back a bit if these happen, you don't want it all killed at

once..no, really.

make sure the pads on the liver and wires with cloth on the wrists total up to

about .5mA-1.0mA while doing your two shortie sessions a day. You can cut it to

two 10 minute sessions eventually, for later once you have this under control.

While doing this you have to reverse the electrode every 5 minutes or so. To do

that, either remove and reverse their positions, or use alligator clips on the

battery and simply reverse them there. You can also get a dpdt switch at radio

shack, get a big one with screws on it, and if you do, ask us to tell you how to

wire it to reverse the current by flipping the switch.

bG

> > > > >

> > > > > I have not built a godzilla yet, but plan to for my HCV, but I was

wondering if it could be possible to build one using a 12 volt battery, instead

of the 6 volt design ~ Could resisters or something throttle a 12 volt down to a

6 volt output?

> > > > >

> > > >

> > >

> >

>

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