View Full Version : The Quantum Magnetic Resonance Analyzer: a do-it-yourself health diagnostic tool that really seems to work
Bill Ryan
24th September 2016, 13:36
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Hi, All:
Don't be put off by the title! :)
Some of you may know all about this, and I'd welcome input from anyone who does. But I wanted to report an interesting personal experience here with this laptop-sized machine:
http://www.detoxification-patches.com/photo/pl934102-portable_mini_quantum_magnetic_resonance_health_analyzer_for_body_cardiovascular_analysis.jpg
I'd previously known it as a 'Quantum Machine". They've been around for a few years now. In the simplest terms, you hold a pair of electrodes in your hand, and in less than two minutes (maybe just one minute) it gives an onscreen numerical readout of the condition of every body organ and function -- from your heart to your memory, and everything in between. :)
I was just a tiny bit skeptical, but it looked and seemed impressive. The one I saw and was tested on was used by a fully qualified medical doctor in Ecuador who works in a hospital here, and he swore by it. He (the doc) has a bunch of alternative views and experiences (he is also a qualified homeopath), but is absolutely not a 'quack'. He's a respected professional in the orthodox medical community.
How I came to this is because I had an odd symptom or two that I wanted to get checked out. I had a full lab blood test, and also a heart Doppler ultrasound scan. (Don't worry! :bigsmile: My heart is as solid as a rock. :muscle: ) The Quantum Machine's readout was 100% confirmed by all the real-world 'hard' detail in the lab test and the ultrasound. That got my attention.
What also got my attention was that these machines (the one I was checked out on is called the AH-Q4 Quantum Analyzer, which has been around for a few years) are super-cheap. I mean, ridiculously so.
This one, I've just had confirmed by e-mail, one can buy for $80 + shipping. That's kind of crazy. (I'd heard, and I don't have hard data that this is true, that the cost used to be tens of thousands of dollars 5-6 years ago. Can anyone confirm?)
It's interesting reading about this on the net. There are a bunch of 'quack-busting' reports about it, as one might expect. As best as I can see -- but maybe I've not yet got it right -- there are some machines which really do work wondrously, and others, maybe more recent, that are knock-offs or scams and actually don't work at all.
And there seems to be a bewildering variety of these on the market. That's why I specified the older model above, which based on my experiences so far, I can vouch really seems to work.
Please do report all your own knowledge and experiences, first or second hand. That may be most useful to a lot of people.
Important note: This machine does NOT treat or cure anything... it gives data only, like any lab test. Interpreting the numbers, if they seem out of 'normal' range, may be an expert's job. But it's surely interesting, and kind of nice to know, at zero effort and comparatively little cost, that all may be perfectly well with any part of your body you might have a question about.
:star:
Rex
24th September 2016, 15:03
Bill can you post where you can get the $80 one? Or pm me? I want to get one and will report back on using it.
Bill Ryan
24th September 2016, 15:20
Bill can you post where you can get the $80 one? Or pm me? I want to get one and will report back on using it.Yes, for sure: (I think this link will work!)
http://message.alibaba.com/msgsend/feedbackInquirySucess.htm?productIds=1362930069&sceneId=3082&guestAccountId=820753558
I had an e-mail reply within 30 minutes, in excellent English, from a woman at 'The Shenzhen Huge Creation Technology Limited'. That's a copy-and-paste of the company name, the second of the four retailers in the link above, that also had the highest reported response rate and response time.
She asked me what language I'd like the software and reports, and where it would be shipped to, so she could calculate the shipping charge. She confirmed it was in stock, and that the price was $80.
I believe you can pick up and follow up those inquiry links yourself, but you may well have to open up an Alibaba account to do so (simple and free). Do make sure that it's not going on my account, though... no problem at all, but it'd mean I just get all the replies sent to me. :)
Daozen
24th September 2016, 15:28
What also got my attention was that these machines (the one I was checked out on is called the AH-Q4 Quantum Analyzer, which has been around for a few years) are super-cheap. I mean, ridiculously so.
This one, I've just had confirmed by e-mail, one can buy for $80 + shipping. That's kind of crazy. [I](I'd heard, and I don't have hard data that this is true, that the cost used to be tens of thousands of dollars 5-6 years ago. Can anyone confirm?)
:star:
The 80 dollar price tag is a sign of sincerity, IMO. I've long waited for machines like this to come out. My friends and I researched them back in London 10-15 years ago. They were all about 3-5 grand back then. We came to the conclusion that the technology was solid, but there were a bunch of charlatans jacking up the price 100 fold.
I tried an acupen around the same time. It was just a small acupuncture device. It definitely worked. No placebo, it was affecting the nerves directly.
http://cdn.trendhunterstatic.com/thumbs/acupuncture-pen.jpeg
Used a SCENAR. It was OK, but nothing special.
I look forward to trying one of these. Thanks for bringing this out, Bill.
Bill Ryan
24th September 2016, 15:52
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An update re contact details... been totally impressed so far with the speed of response. I just received this, after asking if there was a direct way to make inquiries. (She separately apologized that she'd not be able to find out the shipping costs until Monday.)
Dear Bill,
My email is sales5@healthcare-ems.com.
My Skype is hugesales5.
My whatsapp is 008613682374430. That is also my phone number.
You can let your friends contact me using these ways.
Best regards,
Flora
Justplain
24th September 2016, 17:13
Hi Bill, thanks for posting this thread. The great thing about having an accurate health analyzer is that once you have an idea of what the problem is, without the time/expense of going to a doctor, then you can research naturopathic treatments on the internet. My wife has successfully treated several maladies that way. We successfully found ways to control my blood pressure that way.
Naturopathic solutions, including homeopathy, herbalism, chinese medicine, fasting, electronic and ultrasound, etc., treatments are the way of the future, i believe. The solutions my family have found, often herbal, when done correctly are highly effective without onerous costs or harmful side effects.
Rosco1
25th September 2016, 02:40
This one from ebay looks similar, price tag is £69.98 free P&P
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Latest-45-Report-Magnetic-Quantum-Resonance-body-4th-Gen-Hi-Tech-Health-Analyzer-/191850917943?var=&hash=item2cab34b037:m:m_bJF48bcJ3bXEyUr7EvsBg
Bill Ryan
25th September 2016, 12:11
This one from ebay looks similar, price tag is £69.98 free P&P
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Latest-45-Report-Magnetic-Quantum-Resonance-body-4th-Gen-Hi-Tech-Health-Analyzer-/191850917943?var=&hash=item2cab34b037:m:m_bJF48bcJ3bXEyUr7EvsBg
Yes, there seems to be a huge variety available. (And they all look fairly similar!)
My own personal stance on this is to play it safe with the same model as I feel I know worked impressively from my own direct experience. The new model here (http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?93557-The-Quantum-Magnetic-Resonance-Analyzer-a-do-it-yourself-health-diagnostic-tool-that-really-seems-to-work&p=1101265&viewfull=1#post1101265), the identical one that I used, is actually cheaper than the one you found on eBay.
What would be very useful, of course, would be some kind of impartial consumer report where you line up a bunch of them and then, eyes closed with the help of a friend, do a 'blind' test to compare all the readings.
Desire
25th September 2016, 13:13
Hi Bill,
would you please state the company name on your quantum analyzer.I am having trouble finding your exact model.
thanks,love you, Desire
Bill Ryan
25th September 2016, 13:19
Hi Bill,
would you please state the company name on your quantum analyzer.I am having trouble finding your exact model.
thanks,love you, Desire
Hi there, Desire, and I don't actually have one in hand in front of me... it's the one used by a practitioner I visited. Whole story is above. ^^
The model is called the AH-Q4 Quantum Analyzer, and details of where to get it are in posts #3 (http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?93557-The-Quantum-Magnetic-Resonance-Analyzer-a-do-it-yourself-health-diagnostic-tool-that-really-seems-to-work&p=1101261&viewfull=1#post1101261) and #5 (http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?93557-The-Quantum-Magnetic-Resonance-Analyzer-a-do-it-yourself-health-diagnostic-tool-that-really-seems-to-work&p=1101265&viewfull=1#post1101265) above. I don't actually know if the company I'm in touch with (very efficiently too, I have to say) are manufacturers or suppliers. But if you contact them yourself -- e-mail is easy, excellent English, prompt response -- they might be able to tell you more than I can.
Desire
25th September 2016, 14:25
Thanks Bill
I did see the message above but my computer won't take that e mail address.I'll just go back to Alibaba.I think i saw that model number
I am so glad you wrote us about this analyzer.Sounds perfect.
thanks again for all you do
sheme
25th September 2016, 14:51
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iaDQgVwKO-Y This is worth watching- few minutes only.
Bill Ryan
25th September 2016, 16:03
Thanks Bill
I did see the message above but my computer won't take that e mail address.
Might be because the link tried to auto-open an e-mail application on your computer.
Try copying and pasting this -- no link embedded here this time:
sales5@healthcare-ems.com
Nick Matkin
25th September 2016, 16:19
Mmmm... I'd like some electronics engineer to open one up and assess it before anyone gets too carried away. ;)
I've heard of similar machines that were almost impossible to pry open. Designed like that for good reason, because once an example was forced open and all the opaque resin was chipped off the innards, it contained nothing more than a 555 timer chip and a few resistors to flash the LEDs - depending upon how some switches were set on the impressive front panel! And that 'device' cost hundreds of dollars.
(Sorry to p*** on the parade again.)
avid
25th September 2016, 16:29
Yes Nick, guarantee void if opened.... 🙄
Bill Ryan
25th September 2016, 19:19
(Sorry to p*** on the parade again.)
Hi there, Nick! :waving:
I don't blame you for being skeptical. It's interesting stuff, but (I think) worthy of an Avalon conversation.
If you did a mass spectroscopy analysis of a bottle of homeopathic drops, you'd find there was nothing there at all apart from water.
You're most welcome to start a thread stating that homoeopathy can't possibly work, according to all the known laws of everything. I and the other mods will promise to wade in and drag you out of the ring when things get too bloody! :bigsmile:
avid
25th September 2016, 19:38
Oops, the memory of water as well....that is definitely true.
We still have to test equipment for viability, some is great, some fail. There are some standards ie CE marks. I have bought some weird stuff which burned my foot, caused nasty rashes, and even some homeopathic stuff had adverse reactions.
The best stuff was the bioresonance, which could be attuned, and really made me well, as well as reiki which can can balance one's natural energy fields.
Nick Matkin
25th September 2016, 19:42
(Sorry to p*** on the parade again.)
Hi there, Nick! :waving:
I don't blame you for being skeptical. It's interesting stuff, but (I think) worthy of an Avalon conversation.
If you did a mass spectroscopy analysis of a bottle of homeopathic drops, you'd find there was nothing there at all apart from water.
You're most welcome to start a thread stating that homoeopathy can't possibly work, according to all the known laws of everything. I and the other mods will promise to wade in and drag you out of the ring when things get too bloody! :bigsmile:
Thanks Bill!
Not wishing to derail the thread with another subject, but I'll just say that regardless which laws homoeopathy may or may not follow, like all things weird we need to ask one question: Is there evidence it works, other than the placebo effect? Remember, some placebos are very potent... :)
But since homoeopathy hasn't disappeared any more than acupuncture or reflexology have disappeared, I'm assuming some people get some benefit.
If there is independent evidence that the Quantum Magnetic Resonance Analyzer diagnoses are independently and consistently confirmed by convention medicine, then however it functions, it needs to be taken seriously and studied. After all, it could save our cash-strapped NHS millions!
(I don't think I want to start a homoeopathy blood-bath thread!)
Johnny
26th September 2016, 01:45
............
Not wishing to derail the thread with another subject, but I'll just say that regardless which laws homoeopathy may or may not follow, like all things weird we need to ask one question: Is there evidence it works, other than the placebo effect? Remember, some placebos are very potent... :)
...............
Also remember the Nocebo effect, which is just as effective and also very potent : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nocebo
If there is independent evidence that the Quantum Magnetic Resonance Analyzer diagnoses are independently and consistently confirmed by convention medicine, then however it functions, it needs to be taken seriously and studied. After all, it could save our cash-strapped NHS millions!
Do you really think that
independently and consistently confirmed by convention medicine exist to day ??, in this case you get what you pay for !!!
Johnny :)
Justplain
26th September 2016, 02:21
If someone in Avalon acquires this gadget, i'd like to hear their analysis of it. One test should be the wet paper towel wrapped around the 'grip meter', or whatever is used to get a reading, before the reading is taken. The guy in the video (link in above post in thread) was gripping the hand meter while getting a reading and then switched it in the middle of the process, which is not a fair test, imo.
Since Bill has already confirmed some accuracy in this gadget, getting some additional tests from our own people would be helpful. We dont have to understand how it works, just whether if DOES work.
kanishk
29th September 2016, 05:32
Dr. Bill Deagle use this machines and sells them too. He asks for the QRMA report to suggest the appropriate vitamins and minerals. So that's when I got interested in QRMA machines.
Yes 4-5 years ago they where very costly and still the price of QRMA machine which Bill Deagle is selling on his website is too high.
In early days authentic QRMA companies use to make their software inaccessible, but now the data in that software is now available to all other QRMA producing companies I think. So the difference between the original and other replicated product is the chip used in the machine. According to people on internet Many companies try to replicate the QRMA chips and sensors but where not that perfect in replicating them.
Because Integrated Circuit is Integrated Circuit, what so difficult to replicate it? I think. So the difference could be in making the similar IC with other patent no. or replicating the original one covertly.
So I think there are perfect QRMA machines, near to perfect QRMA machine, average QRMA machines and Fake QRMA machines in the market. The thing with fake QRMA machines is that it will generate fake report on the computer. While the other average type of machine use cheaply available substitute IC which can make the software generate near to perfect reports on computer. And near to perfect QRMA machine manufactured by those companies who know what they are doing and use slimier or same IC and sensor data and calibrate their Software according to the data produced by the machine. Or they have the insights into the data researched by the acupuncturist who developed these QRMA machines.
In India many people are buying these machine for home use. I can do a QRMA testing for 300 rupees i.e. 5 USD in my town from the seller who sells these machines. Nowadays other model is coming which they say is more perfect in analyzing the body where you only have to place your palm on the machine and don't have to worry about wearing any metallic objects on the body.
Yes the reports are corrects I think according to me. But sometimes can be faulty in some areas. Like showing incorrect collagen amount in my case. So you need to check again. I can buy these devices for 3500-6000 rupees 60-100 USD here depending on different models. The one costing 80 USD in china would certainly cost me here 160 USD or more here from a seller in India, if someone is selling that here.
I am also curious in finding out the perfect companies of QRMA on Alibaba. There is a one member here on avalon who know lot more about QRMA machine because he is more into Dr. Bill Deagle's stuff. Maybe he knows which brands of QRMA are good.
kanishk
29th September 2016, 05:50
Digital Therapy Machine also known as many other names. I had a demo of this machine, didn't bought it. And just from few days wanted to buy it, and this discussion came up. Image in the first post shows Accupoint Message. This smaller version can be powered direct from USB and is effective. My calf muscles always tend to be tender. And when I use this machine the pain went away. When a acupuncturist in other city use to balance my chakras by chakra and acupuncture point scanning and doing acupuncture, I didn't need this sort of thing. But now in this town there are acupressure people who charge very less as to 50 rupee per message of full body according to the problems in your body, but the pain in my calf comes back in few hours. But when I use this machine shown below, the relief stayed for long time.
https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/1163/6606/products/tens-acupuncture-digital-therapy-machine-electronic-pulse-massager-1_1024x1024.jpg?v=1460528361
Daozen
29th September 2016, 07:08
Digital Therapy Machine also known as many other names. I had a demo of this machine, didn't bought it. And just from few days wanted to buy it, and this discussion came up. Image in the first post shows Accupoint Message. This smaller version can be powered direct from USB and is effective. My calf muscles always tend to be tender. And when I use this machine the pain went away. When a acupuncturist in other city use to balance my chakras by chakra and acupuncture point scanning and doing acupuncture, I didn't need this sort of thing. But now in this town there are acupressure people who charge very less as to 50 rupee per message of full body according to the problems in your body, but the pain in my calf comes back in few hours. But when I use this machine shown below, the relief stayed for long time.
Interesting Kanish, do you have a link to a machine you've tried? There are many types, I'd like to try a recommended brand. A USB version is even more interesting.
kanishk
29th September 2016, 08:34
Digital Therapy Machine also known as many other names. I had a demo of this machine, didn't bought it. And just from few days wanted to buy it, and this discussion came up. Image in the first post shows Accupoint Message. This smaller version can be powered direct from USB and is effective. My calf muscles always tend to be tender. And when I use this machine the pain went away. When a acupuncturist in other city use to balance my chakras by chakra and acupuncture point scanning and doing acupuncture, I didn't need this sort of thing. But now in this town there are acupressure people who charge very less as to 50 rupee per message of full body according to the problems in your body, but the pain in my calf comes back in few hours. But when I use this machine shown below, the relief stayed for long time.
Interesting Kanish, do you have a link to a machine you've tried? There are many types, I'd like to try a recommended brand. A USB version is even more interesting.
I can just search digital therapy machine and can get Indian online shopping website links. And below is the website of manufacturer
http://www.digitaltherapymachine.net/
And here I searched a common amazon link for USA, https://www.amazon.com/Digital-Therapy-Machine-Great-Reliever/dp/B00BLV6Y9I
There are modes in this machine, like acupuncture mode, message mode etc. And there is one bigger machine that had many wires to message whole body at once.
Daozen
29th September 2016, 08:58
Digital Therapy Machine also known as many other names. I had a demo of this machine, didn't bought it. And just from few days wanted to buy it, and this discussion came up. Image in the first post shows Accupoint Message. This smaller version can be powered direct from USB and is effective. My calf muscles always tend to be tender. And when I use this machine the pain went away. When a acupuncturist in other city use to balance my chakras by chakra and acupuncture point scanning and doing acupuncture, I didn't need this sort of thing. But now in this town there are acupressure people who charge very less as to 50 rupee per message of full body according to the problems in your body, but the pain in my calf comes back in few hours. But when I use this machine shown below, the relief stayed for long time.
Interesting Kanish, do you have a link to a machine you've tried? There are many types, I'd like to try a recommended brand. A USB version is even more interesting.
I can just search digital therapy machine and can get Indian online shopping website links. And below is the website of manufacturer
http://www.digitaltherapymachine.net/
And here I searched a common amazon link for USA, https://www.amazon.com/Digital-Therapy-Machine-Great-Reliever/dp/B00BLV6Y9I
There are modes in this machine, like acupuncture mode, message mode etc. And there is one bigger machine that had many wires to message whole body at once.
Thanks. I know I can do a general web search and find results, but the market is full of bad products and low quality clones. I was looking for a specific brand recommendation, but if you don't know any, that's OK. The link you posted is interesting, with some positive reviews, but some people are worried about the strength of the electrical pulses. The writing on the unit is in Chinese:
https://www.amazon.com/Digital-Therapy-Machine-Great-Reliever/dp/B00BLV6Y9I
I'll research further, and tread carefully. A badly made unit could be dangerous...
Bill Ryan
29th September 2016, 13:17
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Minor update re online ordering of these machines. (I promise you, I have no investment in this! Just useful info for interested members and guests.)
I've been totally impressed with the quality and speed of the communication from China. Very prompt (replies often literally within minutes), clear, precise, efficient, friendly, excellent English. A sneak-peek at the kind of modern, high-tech, high-quality commerce that's driving China.
Shipping cost to the US of one of these machines is $67 ($88 for two), via DHL, 7 days delivery. I've experienced far worse from just a few miles away. :)
Rex
29th September 2016, 17:24
I've got it ordered, so "stay tuned".
Savannah
29th September 2016, 21:20
Amazon.com Quantum Magnetic Resonance Analyzer & Massage Therapy 45 Reports 3rd GEN $99.99
One of the reviews was a bit disturbing:
"A friend of mine bought one of these 3rd generation units several months ago. After further evaluation it was determined that these units are a SCAM. If you setup 5 names for yourself to test, then run a test on yourself using each name about 2 minutes apart, the results are completely different. Yes, you are holding the same sensor each time, and each time testing with a different name, and each time completely different results for YOUR body. It is a SCAM unit with preprogrammed data that at random gives you a false report. The test report has nothing to do with YOUR body. It is dangerous to evaluate people with medical problems and show them reports with false information. I purchased one of the latest 4th generation units a month ago, determined the same problem, and returned the unit. I also requested that Amazon remove ALL such devices from their website, including 3rd party sellers. "
As you say Bill it may depend on who manufactures the machine. However it could be that these machines are so good there is a campaign to discredit them and you cant trust the bad reviews.
Atlas
29th September 2016, 21:45
[...] it could be that these machines are so good there is a campaign to discredit them and you cant trust the bad reviews.
From: QRMA (Quantum Resonance Magnetic Analyzer) teardown (http://www.eevblog.com/forum/reviews/qrma-%28quantum-resonance-magnetic-analyzer%29-teardown/)
"As an electronics practitioner, i managed to teardown one of those so called "Quantum Analyzer" and found out that it is totally crap!!. The sensor which supposed to detect the very feeble "electromagnetic waves" is nothing more than two plates separated by a non-conductive plastic [...] i totally removed the sensor and replace a resistor that simulates the skin resistance (around 10k-100K) and later found out that my resistor is suffering from blood sugar imbalance (diabetic) and have problem on its "kidneys". [...] maybe the one i got is a fake..."
Nick Matkin
29th September 2016, 22:15
Thanks Atlas. I had a look at the link and comments. The EEVBlog has some smart cookies on it. I have used it myself for technical help once or twice.
The original posting on the EEVBlog was was from March 2014, so maybe the one being discussed here is not the same and is the 'real deal' now - although it appears to have the same 'quantum magnetic sensor'. Then again...
I like the quote suggesting it should be called "Skin Resistance with Blinking Lights" detector. Yes, possibly a very fancy way to measure just skin resistance, which means nothing at all.
The boards inside look fairly well made (if you ignore the hot-melt glue!), with surface-mount components, though whether they do anything is another matter. But a red flag to anyone inspecting electronics is finding ICs with the identification removed! As far as I know there is no legitimate reason for doing this. The other red flag of course is using the word 'quantum' to describe anything aimed at the non-technical purchaser.
Daozen
29th September 2016, 23:41
Not sure about these units specifically, but healing devices in general is an interesting topic. I'm sure there's a device out there that:
1) Effectively heals you as you sleep.
2) Costs less than 200USD.
But we'd have to wade through ten-thousands false claims before we got there.
The device in Elysium intrigues me (see cued vid). I'm sure a similar device must exist somewhere on this Earth. Many of humankind's greatest discoveries (electricity,radio, magnetism)have been made with equipement that would cost less than 100USD in today's terms. We also know that some of the most powerful medicines out there cost pennies a day.
https://youtu.be/QILNSgou5BY?t=55
Search terms like:
Device healing sleep waves frequency
Will turn up a flood of fakes, but there may be diamonds in there somewhere. Maybe adding more technical terms:
Device healing sleep waves frequency schematic capacitor wire
... may narrow the search.
wnlight
30th September 2016, 01:18
Bill, One question that I did not see posed in this thread is the difficulty in interpreting the results. Must you have a medical background to use this machine?
Bill Ryan
30th September 2016, 01:47
Bill, One question that I did not see posed in this thread is the difficulty in interpreting the results. Must you have a medical background to use this machine?
Here's a page of sample reports from one model of machine:
http://essentials-health.com/analyzer/reports_index.htm
Basically, it gives a digital (numerical) readout, and compares that with the 'normal', 'healthy' range. I'd suggest that it does need trained, expert, qualified opinion to analyze the significance of a combination of several readings that are outside the normal spectrum for healthy people. (That might go without saying! It's almost always the combination of factors that's important.)
But it might also provide reassurance if you have a question about a particular organ or function, or (on the other hand) confirm a suspicion that something's not quite right.
I have to add! :) (Context, to readers who may not know him: wnlight (Warren) is a very experienced and accomplished dowser.)
It'd be MOST interesting to compare the machine's output with your dowsing results on particular questions. (Meant quite seriously!)
And, a joke (to understand, read some of the previous posts on the thread): Maybe if you open Warren up, there's nothing in there either. But the dowsing still works perfectly. :bigsmile:
Rex
4th October 2016, 13:04
Got it last night - that was super fast coming from China, though somewhat expected because the shipping cost almost as much as the unit itself. I haven't had a chance to load the software and try it out yet. It also came with this TENS therapy system. That's what the sandals are part of - TENS stands for Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation - whatever that means. I'll give that a try at some point too. The manual is in terrible broken english. The software is definitely older school Windows (they mention Windows 98/Me in the manual). I like the hieroglyphics on the case.
http://projectavalon.net/forum4/attachment.php?attachmentid=34332&d=1475585672
http://projectavalon.net/forum4/attachment.php?attachmentid=34331&d=1475585672
Will post again once I try it out.
kanishk
5th October 2016, 09:59
Dr. Bill Deagle on his site here: http://www.nutrimedical.com/products.jhtml?method=view&product.id=4294 is selling the QRMA device naming it as [QRMA BioPLASM MetaPathiaGR HUNTER BIORESONANCE] there.
So I searched and it seems like this is the device sited here: http://pprdi.com/ he is selling on his website.
You can find the device with same name on Alibaba website. Maybe those are the genuine ones. If anyone is able to find a place where you can buy these models of QRMA and NLS Bio-resonance devices directly, then it will be very good.
Other links: http://www.healthycarer.com/how-to-order.html
http://www.3d-nls-health-analyzer.com/newest-metatron-hunter-nls-system-4025-bioresonance-health-scan-and-therapy.html
Nick Matkin
5th October 2016, 10:28
How does it work then?
I looked at the last link in post #35 and saw "..an analogue-free investigation system..."; "Non-linear analysis.."; "..analysis of the vortex magnetic field..."; etc.
Call me old fashioned, but that sounds like top-quality woo to me.
Someone please tell me this is a real thing based on real, measured results from evidence collected from a statistically significant number of patients and independently confirmed.
Thanks.
Rex
5th October 2016, 13:25
I tried it last night. Everything worked with no issues. It was simple to use. I held the device in my left hand, clicked start, and within about 1-2 minutes it ran through all its tests. I didn't feel anything while it was doing its thing. It generated over 20 pages of reports on the different areas tested.
From what I know about myself, it got it right. I have 2 chronic pain issues and it reported on one of them. The other one didn't seem to be an area that it specifically looked at (lower back) unless I missed it somewhere. There are quite a number of results that are hard to check without blood or other tests. There's a summary page that basically gives advice on how to improve the areas that need help - like taking certain types of supplements to target these issues.
I'll probably give some of these suggestions a try and see what happens.
I'm going to run it again using my right hand to see if the results match. And I'll run the rest of the family through it as well.
Nick Matkin
12th March 2017, 14:16
Could we have an update on the efficacy of this device from those who have used it?
Thanks.
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