Seriously though, I made a mat following your design for my Mother (she's 81, with terrible, incapacitating hip pain. And with her being of the generation that considers these newer/alternative health theories "suspect", I've had a difficult time getting her to consider trying it. (she won't even take aspirin, lest she might become addicted!) Unfortunately, her pain and quality of life have gotten to the point that she gave in and let me make one for her to use. After a couple weeks of using a mat on her chair, it's helped reduce her pain dramatically! Thanks for making this D.I.Y. video on how to make one of these earthing mats, it's really helped her (and by association-my own) physical and mental well being improve immensely!!!
My Mom was also a depression era tough cookie - even with bed sores (horrid shits they are) I had to sneak in Excedrin pain killers - I can't argue with their reluctance to succumb to the medical system actually - praise to you for your caring and attention - I will have to explore this 'grounding' stuff - sometimes I workout barefoot for that reason - interesting concepts
I made my own grounding blanket with a copper sheet and a single wire to a ground rod. Rod was probably at least 8 inches down. Had a terrible sleep so I tested the sheet with an emf reader. It was incredibly hot. The thing acted more like an antenna than a grounding blanket. Likely the ground rod needs to be several feet in the ground. People need to use caution when making their own. I have also heard and seen several warnings about using wall plugs for these, showing heightened electrical currents.
@@kayolastna2215 Maybe just put an extension cord outside the House and down into the ground SEPARATE from the Power system - normally the Ground wire is traveling WITH the Hot and Cold power lines - all those voltages and currents and magnetism's swirling about and around the Ground wire - maybe better to avoid that completely
@@kayolastna2215 The grounding rod has to be placed 1 foot into the Earth , & you have to pour 1-2 glasses of water over the rod every 2-3 days to keep it moist.
a problem I see w/ this set up is the bolt, nut and washer appears to be zinc plated. The zinc will react w/ the copper (galvanic action). That would cause the connection to corrode. it would be best to have all like metals, ie: copper or brass screw washers and nut with the copper screen.
I too was highly skeptical of the zink bolt, washer and nut... but i couldn't find a copper bolt, washer and nut so i used zinc and was frankly shocked that it was still conductive when i metered myself!! perhaps because even though zinc isn't conductive... the copper wire was making contact with the copper screen and the bolt, washer & nut merely secured them together... but it definitely worked. (i'm a skeptic at heart so i actually tried to make it fail but it worked... even when i touched the copper screen with ONE finger!).
You can find NO OX which is a anti corrosive agent for just this connection. Used for copper and silver wire connections. Basically metal to metal connections that may corrode.
USE GREEN WIRE FOR GROUNDING! Follow the code all the time to get a good mindset for future use in making anything to see it is safe. I like the idea of using a separate grounding rod outside better and attaching that. A Zink rod can work for that. It's cheaper with an (acorn nut) connection. I am an electrician.
Why is using a separate grounding rod better? If you use a separate grounding rod, what is the best way to connect to it from inside the house? Run the wire through a window or door?
Hi there ARush... I appreciate your information my question is... Would you be willing to explain how I could use an outdoor grounding rod I think you guys said a zinc rod... To intensify my grounding inside at my mat
Thank you for spreading the word about grounding/earthing. The benefits heard by countless people are phenomenal and spreading the knowledge is the best thing we can do. 😊- Live Life Grounded!
Here’s my 2cents worth: Im not an electrician but I play one every day in the capacity of an apartment maintenance technician lol. With any wiring project, if remotely possible, live wires should be red, black or blue, common or “neutral” wires white, and ground wires green (or bare). (No, it’s not that big of a deal with what he’s doing here. It’s just a good rule of thumb. This way in the unlikely event that someone stumble upon this contraption in the future they will have a better idea of what the hell it is lol. 😁 Lastly I’ll chime in on the “safety” aspect of using the outlet v/s a remote grounding rod. While it’s been rare in my experience (25+yrs), I have heard of a hot or neutral/ground reverse. This is where, for example, the insulation of a wire carrying current is cut or otherwise damaged (think mis-driven nail or screw during construction) and simultaneously happens to make contact with a grounded wire and arcs. This will energize the grounded wire of that circuit. Again, it’s rare as far as I know and I’ve never seen it personally though I have seen hot/neutral reverses. So, although I’d be perfectly comfortable sticking a metal handled ice pick into the ground hole of every outlet I come across for the rest of my life, I’d still say that the ground-rod method would be “safer.” Technicaly.
Always remove the flat blades from the plug. The terminals inside the plug would have voltage beside your wire terminal. Eliminate the danger. Any earthing device should never have the flat blades on the plug. Good job.
Or just remove ONE flat blade for a more sturdy connection to outlet, or cut the wires inside the plug. I live in a house, so I use a grounding rod shoved into the ground outside. It's the BEST grounding method.
@@katherinegreen9874 you squat and by squatting you generate gravity waves, use these waves to press the fart into the ground, this will start the groundfaring process that will accelerate your fetus arms into existence
Great tutorial! I first heard of the original guy who tried grounding… he wrapped copper wire around a long nail and buried it in the ground. Then the wrapped the wire in that metallic tape and taped it to his mattress.
I see no reason for a resistor. The ground, if done to code will go directly outside and attached to a copper rod hammered 3+ feet into the ground. So essentially it is the exact same thing to touch the mat as touching the dirt outside. If people were scared of trying this they could simply run the wire out a window and wrap it around a metal rod hammered a few feet into the dirt.
hey Moe, I appreciate your input a lot. I read the comment sections in a few videos online that covered DIY grounding devices and there were a few people that claimed a resistor was needed but I could not follow the logic. I used a receptacle tester to test my outlets and actually found a couple that needed some work. I don't know if grounding mats actually have any health benefits but I watched a few videos and did some reading and could not find any downside. It was a fun cheap project. Thanks again.
The resistor is in case a wiring fault occurs in the house and a charge gets into the grounding circuit... a very real possibility, especially in apartment buildings if someone in the building installs a new socket incorrectly! Manufacturers of these mats do place a resistor near the wall socket on the wire (60K ohm, but I use a 100K ohm resistor). Do NOT skip the resistor. It costs like two dollars and will save your life.
@@pongmonkey we tested the electrical plug to be sure it was properly grounded before anything else. In fact we tested all of the plugs in our home because the microwave readings here are off the chart. Looking for solutions. Faraday cage for my bedroom is on the list.
@@pmail2731 could I use an anti static wrist strap I think they come with a resister I could just use the wire from one of those and it comes prewired with a alligator clip.
Infrared1967, WHO 'love this'? I have seen how, in the past year or so, how people are OMITTING themselves when texting online! This is VERY disturbing to me bc I KNOW the agenda behind it. Is it 'monkey-see, monkey-do kinda thing? It looks very stupid to the very few of us with an iota of perception remaining. WHY would anyone talk like that, or type like that??? To save a NANO-SECOND of time? I really don't get it? One guy actually called me 'selfish' for using PROPER English. (pronouns) Is EVERYBODY going insane? Please illuminate me.
@@mr.blackhawk142 To Illuminate you “Narcissist is the way to describe your statement” Everyone doesn’t use proper grammar but it matters not just as long as you understand them……..!
You can use an eyelet terminal to go over the bolt (with two washers and a nut. The mat is also good for use on a pillow. double-sided tape will hold it in plsce. pillowcase goes over the assembled pillow and mat.
I made a grounding ankle bracelet out of ordinary aluminum foil folded into a ribbon & tested with my multimeter. Cost: $0.05 (or less). I made a grounding cable from a discarded 3 prong appliance cord & a surplus alligator clip, also tested.
Please do not use aluminum for grounding and even cooking. It is highly poisoning metal. Use Copper or Stainless steel cooking grade. Sweating under aluminum foil is salty and the salt corrodes the aluminum which is absorbed into your skin. Poison!
I used the super basic method Clint Ober used when trying grounding for the first time: aluminium tape on the mattress, except I connected it to a plug, not a grounding rod. I'm in the UK where plugs all have three pins and each pin is easily removable, but initially, I left the other two pins and the fuse in. I found the experience of lying on the bed simultaneously relaxing and frazzling. When I watched this video, I took out other two pins and the fuse and when I plugged back in, no more frazzled feeling. Phew. That wasn't good.
@@RobbsHomemadeLife Seems I forgot to actually say, 'Thank you,' and it's much in order, because the version I had was really doing me some harm and I was wrongly trying to keep an open mind about it. So, yes, emphatically: 'Thank you.' But I also thought it was important to let you and your viewers know that removing the other two pins, or at least the fuse, really seems to matter. Not sure why it would since the other pins weren't connected to my wire, but there it is.
I'm about to attempt this in the UK and I'm so glad I found your comment! is there any chance you may be able to upload a very brief video/picture to see what your setup looks like? I would really appreciate it!! ordering parts now - I also wonder if you just used the very basic cheap 3 pin plugs, or did you use something fancy? thanks!! :)
@@theboraxbandit9563 I'm afraid I've moved on and simply started using a standard grounding sheet and pillowcase. But I used, yes, a basic, cheap 3-pin plug and it's very easy to take the other pins out and just attach your wire to the earthing pin. By the way, I don't really recommend the tape on mattress method as it's very hard to get the tape off afterwards! Maybe get a cheap sheet and put the tape on that, if your'e going DIY. Or look around for the copper grids some people use for DIY grounding mats and sheets. Best of luck.
Hello caziko, so happy I could provide a laugh, I try to have a little fun and am happy there are a few people like you who appreciate my sense of humor, not everybody does, thanks again.😎👌
Hello Juanita, thanks for watching the video and take the time to leave a nice comment. Deb was able to start a go fund me and actually raised a few thousand dollars to help her move.
Great video. Anything I can make myself, I will. Store bought stuff nowadays always seems like the cheapest possible materials at the highest possible price. A piece of copper wire wrapped around my big toe and plugged into the ground would work for me, but maybe I’ll get a bit more creative than that.
yes Luke, I'm gonna buy an extension cord and remove the other wires and terminals or just take the cords off of old appliances or tools and modify. also just thinkn about drilling a hole through my wall and put a ground rod in the ground and hook my wire to the ground or even just the wire into the ground. Peace brother. frederick, Md.
@@JeanLucConnery even though you are joking... i've conducted a test that i saw Clint Ober do in one of his videos. i metered myself and literally touched the grounding mat with THE TIP OF ONE FINGER and the meter read i was totally grounded. So even though Luke Bourgeau was joking about wrapping a copper wire around his big toe... that is sufficient to ground someone!!
Hey, thanks a lot for watching and commenting and having a sense of humor. I really appreciate it. Don't forget I have over 1100 other videos on many subjects and have been adding new videos each week for the last 16 years.
I didn't even have my earthing mat 3 months before it broke. So I'm making one this time. I've got some long crocodile clips, a grounding plug, I've got a few spare rubber cqr matts I can cover in copper tape.
If you don't use a series Resistor you run the risk of shocking yourself if you come in contact with any electrically hot wire/surface while you are grounded. The Resistor protects by limiting the current in such instance.
Actually that's not right. There is no need for a resistor due the goal for this grounding mat is to provide the lowest resistence route to discharge static current present in human body. If you are worry about that scenario that you describe you should consider to implement a diferential switch or something similar but that's a whole new story...
Should have small ~100k ohm resistance due to potential of ground fault current events if plugging into an outlet. This resistance keeps you safe plus allows for good electron current draw.
This is AWESOME tutorial on how to make a grounding/earthing mat.👍🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻 I want to make one for my 80yr old mother and one for myself..instead of using a screw to attach the wire to the copper mesh i want to use copper alligator clips that i already have and then tape them like you did the screw. Also, old homes, so need to use the wire attached to outdoor grounding rod.. Again, thank you so MUCH!😊🤗
What I would do: Remove only the blade on the plug for the load(hot) wire. Assuming your tester says your socket it wired correctly, when facing the socket, the hot line is the upper right slot. The smaller one. Leaving the neutral blade on the plug will hold it in the socket better. Additionally, rather than using a screw and nut and introducing foreign metals, use copper epoxy to join the screen and wire, for a smoother connection. Lastly, for those asking about a stand alone grounding rod, lowes and home depot sell them on the shelf in the electrical department. They're literally a 5'-6' long copper rod that you just pound into the ground with a heavy hammer. Then get a ground rod clamp to connect the wire. How you get the wire into the house is dealers choice.
I bought a grounding mat and tried it for quite a long time but didn't feel it worked. I totally believe grounding works, I've been doing it outside to improve a health condition I've been dealing with and deifitnely had improvements. I'm a bit annoyed about the mat though as I bought it from a reputable place, not sure if it's the electrical system or something, but it must work so much better when you are directly on the ground rather than it going through the ground wire, system, plug, cable etc etc
Adding a 100k resistor would be a good idea in case something crazy unexpected happened in your wiring or if by chance you were touching the mat and also handling something electrical that was plugged in and you somehow touched the hot wire on that electrical device. Limiting your exposure to the current flow to a very safe less than 1milli-amp current going through your body for a 110V hot wire.
@@Earth.Centric The resistor is a small protection device that will break the path of electricity when it exceeds the rated value resistance, of that resistor. (Those colored stripes on it are how they are identified) . So using one would just be a safeguard that if somehow electricity got to that wire, the resistor will stop the flow before it reaches the mat. and in that case you will not end up grounded , forever, 6 feet under. This safety feature is in the end of the cords that come with grounding mats, not in the mat itself.
Hey thanks so much for watching and commenting I really appreciate that I agree with you about the comment section I have some of the best viewers and commenters on RUclips
In part due to this video, I made a mat for myself real quick with wire from Home Depot -30 ft of 10 strand wire for $15. I just attached it crudely to old piece of steel window screen, ran the other end out window to railroad spike I hammered into ground. I put the screen on my bed on bare skin from low thigh down. In 5 min I felt relief from anxiety. I then slept more than I have in weeks or months. Thing is, I need to make on for parents. I’m not really sure which copper wire is ideal. 12 strand? 8 strand? 10 strand? I also need to figure out the resistor part, idk if it would protect in case of lightning.
Kathy, thanks a lot for watching and commenting. I appreciate it. I am going to be doing a video soon to answer the most common questions I have received in this video. I will include yours. I don't think the size of the wire is that important. So long as it is conductive. I did not use a resistor in mind, but there are people who sell commercial units that use resistors so you could duplicate what they did. Here is what I do for lightning, I go to a site called Windy.com and it gives me an accurate forecast for the weather in my area. Also, I don't normally sleep with it. But just use it in a chair while I'm on the computer. If I did want to use it overnight I would check the weather forecast. Hope this helps. I will be posting the video soon.
@RobbsHomemadeLife I read or heard that nighttime is the best time to use a grounding mat or sheet as the body is more receptive and you get ~8 hours straight of grounding.
@@RobbsHomemadeLifeThe weather men are always wrong! If they say its going to be a clear sky overnight, unplug it ! lol The fuse is good in case of some chance of electricity gets through. You'd hate to wake up dead!
FANTASTIC video sir and thank you. 🙏🏻🙏🏻 I was going to make one for myself and thought I’d see if anyone else had done already and save me some time an effort in figuring how to go about it. This is pretty much how I’d imagined it.
Great vid that got me thinking. Thank you! I would probably opt for a banana plug instead of a broken plug. And I'd look for a less bulky connection, like crimping a grommet over the wire instead of a bolt or something.
I like this idea but with copper wire out a window into a copper grounding rod. I don’t want to be part of my house wiring during electrical storm or when dirty electronics are plugged in. Thank you for sharing.
I don't see anything wrong with your idea and it sounds safer to me. I live several floors up in an apartment but if I lived in my own house I would do the same as you're planning to do.
Thank you so much for sharing, it's very useful. I was contemplating to use copper tape somehow, to use for my pillowcase (my head is surrounded with all sorts of electric gadgets). Have to figure out how to do that. 🧐 Copper tape might be softer, but your mat is great for feet.
The 100k ohms that the commercial mats and wires have is so that if you happen to touch the hot wire at an outlet, only 1.2 milliAmps will be flowing through your body -- 120 volts/100k ohms as per Ohms law which is on the low end shock scale . With THIS homemade set up, just don't touch the hot wire. Might be dangerous. Even though it's ground, if you touch the hot wire, your body will be part of the circuit. (Yes, ground DOES go to source so might be wise to wire in a resistor).Before anyone tries this homemade stuff, study some electrical stuff first. BTW, I myself ground at night with a commercial mat and sleep better than I did.
Dont use the electrical socket for an earth .there is a small interferance from the power wires behind it.its proven its not dangerous but it interferes with the earth electrons..use a stake to ground method
QUESTION?years ago I had to go to a Chiropractor bc I developed a big bump of liquid or swollen bump behind my left knee. The dr. had me ly down on my stomach while he attached a wire patch on to the bump and in 30 minutes pain was gone! I was okay for many months and then it came again. I went to the same doctor and he did the same thing for $45 -30 minutes. I was okay for many months and when it came again, the doctor wouldn't treat me? He referred me to another specialist. Question, are Tens Units somehow grounding machines? also my 92 yr old aunt who passed away knew about this- she recommended her son to go and roll in the dirt bc it would energize and balance him? Seems she knew something we didn't and from where did she learn? She was indeed a very spiritual woman who practiced her Faith faithfully
To be honest, after a while I stop using it because I had it connected to an outlet in my bedroom and I kept tripping over it. Also the health problem I had went away. So I didn't have the need to use it as much. Thanks for watching the video and take the time to leave a comment. Much appreciated.
Are you referring to it being grounded? One would need to make sure that said-grounding rod was not in the same area as the underground powerline coming into the property/house, because if those two were close in proximity, the energy from the one could compromise the purity of the other, which would defeat the purpose.
Hi guys! Hope you do super well today. I have a question about grounding - could I ground myself by wrapping a chopper wire around my ankle / wrist and wire it into dirt/ soil? Thanks for your help! Anouk
Yes, you could. From what I've found the Palms of your hands and Bottoms/Soles of your feet make the best connections though. I personally think that it has to due with the Skin Thickness, More Nerves, and a tendency to be a bit "sweaty" in those areas.
@@codybanks9944 Thanks so much for this info, really appreciate it! I've read somewhere you need to have two cords to be grounded - one in and one out, I guess like normal electricity needs to... Know anything about that too? :D
@@anoukanansimeditations That makes no sense. No device uses two grounding cords. The typical 3 plug outlet has 2 prongs for live, and 1 round (the green screw when wiring) grounding port. Somewhere on your property that ground line leads to a copper rod that has been pounded into the soil.
@@JohnsPrime Actually your neutral line(white wire) returns to ground through your electrical panel. The green is used for safety if there is a short. If you are positively charge, a grounding wire will allow the electrons to move to ground. One wire.
Instead of stripping 1in bare wire and then bolting it down and having that not to try to cover up so you don't feel it, why didn't you just go ahead and strip back maybe 1 ft or even 2 ft of wire and place it underneath the gorilla tape that you already taped the edges down with anyway. As long as any part of the wire touches the bat it's good and he would definitely get a good connection with 12in stripped-back on The wire and gorillas taped down to the mat. This way you wouldn't be sleeping on a nut and bolt
10:00 The wire itself is already a resistor so there is no need to use any "formal" resistor which is only going to make the energy discharge slower. When you walk with bare feets on the ground you don´t put any resistors in the soles of your feet, or do you ?
Food for thought...."maybe" this is WHY people get ELECTROCUTED if they are walking barefooted on the Earth and Lightning that strikes the ground enters their body through their "NON RESISTOR" protected feet. Things that make you go....Hmmm......rofl :~)
What I did was took a set of doctor shoals insoles, some aluminum heat duct tape. You need to stick the tape full length of insoles,split and bare some speaker wire, lay it on top of tape and put another small piece of tape over exposed wire( because the adhesive on the tape is nonconductive) and either plug into wall socket or grounding rod, then I cut the toes off some socks and used them to hold in place on your feet or your arms...ect... and vwulla-vwulla your grounded,,,, enjoy your new heath...
I think we should double check the house's electrical wiring before use this method of grounding. There's some electric events that can lead to an dangerous spike of voltage and/or current in the ground wire. If something crazy happened while you are conected you can die fast. Another options are a protection circuit with resistors and a fuse or varistor, or grounding the mat directly into earth by an exclusive wire.
Rodrigo, thanks for taking the time to watch and leave a comment. I made my video to show what I did and I'm not telling anyone to do the same. I encourage everyone to gather their own information before making a decision on building and using a grounding Mapp. In addition, in the video. I showed how I checked the wiring using an outlet tester. Also, if I were to make it again. I would add a resistor as many people have mentioned. Also, if I have the option I would just use a wire out my window into the ground. However, I live in an apartment several floors up and did not have that option. Thanks again.
@@Earth.Centric The wire is thin, so couldnt you, at the corner of the screen, take a toothpick or a needle and gently move the thin screen wire, for the grounding wire. Theres usually some wiggle room with screens , so maybe you can remove the screen, place the wire out the window, and put the screen back in.?
I wonder if a person can just get an old extension cord and cut it back and only leave the ground wire near the plug and on the other end cut it back a couple of feet and have only the ground wire showing leaving the other two wires in that 8 or 10 ft section alone so it doesn't bother and then just plug it into the outlet and then just wrap the bare ground wire around your hand or ankle while you're sitting on the sofa or chair watching TV for 20 or 30 minutes at a time? Wouldn't this holding a bare wire for a few minutes do the same thing?
Hi Rick, I don't want to comment on your proposed grounding cord because I may not be on the same page but as far as holding the wire instead of laying on the screen. I think you get the same results. I remember reading somewhere that the best results were from the bottom of the feet or the palms of your hand. I basically just use the screen on my back sitting in a chair or propped up on a pillow. But holding it would work. I think.
I think that would work safer if the wire went outside, unless you add the resistor. On the other end , maybe get a cheap cookie sheet, and screw the wire to it, and rest you bare feet on it! But , If I ever visit, dont offer me any home made cookies!
The ground wire ends up at the same place the left spade does on the main panel and transformer. That wire is filled with harmful frequencies and if you had an oscilloscope you would see them. Unfortunately the earthing community doesn't understand that a multimeter just measures the difference in potential. Meaning if you touched a wire with 120 volts on it and attached the other probe it would read zero even though it's 120 volts......is this safe? Those with multimeters can try the experiment at home and place one probe in a 120 Volt receptacle, in the right spade, and the other probe in the right spade of another receptacle as this is the "hot" side. If it is on the same circuit it will read 0.00! if it is on another leg or phase it will read 240. The ground wire is just another pathway for electricity to flow in case the neutral is compromised.
Just curious...as I read the discussions about whether or not it is better to use the ground through the outlet or through a rod stuck in the ground...I have a question. What if there is a nearby lightning strike while using the mat? Could electricity run up the wire to the mat? And is there a way to protect against a lightning strike? Had a nearby strike a few months ago...and several neighbors lost electronic devices...I'm glad it wasn't worse.
I can only speak for myself but I would never use a grounding mat if there was any chance of thunderstorms in the immediate vicinity. If I would have had the option I would have used a rod in the ground with the wire coming up into my window but I have several floors up in the apartment building that does not allow anything like that outside of the building
@RobbsHomemadeLife Thanks for taking the time to read and respond. I appreciate the advice and think I'll follow it! It makes sense. Thanks again, and great video.
I didn't realize these mats had any sort of medical benefits, just use them for my electronics work. One thing I'd do though is make sure that the surface of the mesh is actually non-insulated bare copper. My concern would be that it's made from enameled wire or similar to keep the mesh from oxidizing. Would be easy enough to check.
Electro Static Dissipation (ESD) devises use 1 Mega Ohm In-Line Resistance. This is too high for biological benefits. Grounding products only use 1 K Ohm In-Line Resisters.
This is amazing ,thank you so much for sharing your knowledge. could you please do a video on how to make EMF protection for smart meter or WIFI and phone please, thank you so much.
I don't think a resister would do anything other then block the flow of electrons, 8f anything to put in line would be a diode to make sure the flow of electrons matains a singular direction ie not letting the electrons back flow
Well, I bought the mesh and taped it but it started to curl up. I was laying on it over night. Ihad some bathroom wall plastic so cutstrips 1 in. wide and gooped them to the edge. That helped stiffen the mat but the mesh began to develop holes and tore at the edges from laying on it for just acouple weeks. I fixed them with more tape but it looks like hell now. I think I will spring for the real one.
I live in a seconed story apartment. I made a home made canopy around my bed and idk if i should ground it outside theiugh the window or make a DIY outlet plug. Can you tell me exaclty step by step a list of what materials to get at home depot and how to install the ground or outlet and the safest way to go about doing it and where to put it so i dont get shocked? I'm new to this so it would really mean a lot. Thank you 🙏
Good idea and thank you for shearing. However, I do have an observation that really applies to all youtube video warriors out there. Before posting a video, try finding in your circle or family some professional, an engineer or doctor or pharmacist depending on the subject of your video to see it first. Too many transpire unprofessional-ism when executing the project, simple handling of tools, components and so on. Not to diminish the value of your idea, but to improve the presentation.
Daniel, I have over 1300 videos and I'm afraid this is not my best work. Which is unfortunate considering how popular the video has become. That's the way it works out sometimes.
I dont even trust the "professionals', mechanics, plumbers, especially doctors! How many times have they been wrong. Calling oneself a professional doesnt mean shit. But it sounds good.
Did you test it? I'm curious how the multi-meter numbers compare to the purchased mat. Second question... since the other two prongs are not connected to wires, i'm curious if leaving them on would make the plug more secure in the outlet? On second thought, maybe there is some current "bleeding" into the copper ground.. even though the two prongs are not connected with wires. Thoughts?
Please don't do this, you take many risks doing so, and mostly to your own life. Code for mats and wrist bands requires a 1 Meg Ohm resistor in series, and for them to be tested at least daily. Code exists for a reason - your safety. Your ground wire should be green or green and yellow, and the wire should be double insulated. The mat being copper will corrode, and is simultaneously too conductive and unreliable in the future due to corrosion, which is also a problem with your nut and bolt connection creating galvanic corrosion. I would never use just one pin in a socket from the mechanical loosening perspective, a ring tongue terminal termination screwed into the metal socket mounting screw with locking feature, and strain relief is standard practice. The commercial mats are deliberately not just raw metal for a reason, that would be too conductive, you run the risk of cross shorting devices, and yourself. If you are not concerned about the importance of complying with regulations you could ask Stockton Rush all about it.
Can anyone answer for me?: I have an 'earthing' grounding mat with cord to plug into a grounded wall outlet. I want to do a diy fix to take it with me camping. Can I just wrap som e copper wire around the metal that plugs into the socket, and then to a nail or small copper rod, to put in ground outside of camper. I'm assuming that would work ok? And does it 'have' to be copper wire? I have lots of jewelry wire wrapping wire, which who knows if it's copper inside...think it is. Can I attach to any metal, or does it have to be copper? If I can take a plain old metal fork or butter knife to stick in the ground...all the better. BTW: I use both a magnetic mattress pad, and a grounding mat on bed , and it really helps with arthritis, pain, and my blood pressure. This is why I want to set one up for when I go camping.
Hello! If you're going camping, it's the perfect time to ground naturally with the earth. It's so much better. Grounding mats are alternatives for those that don't have access to beautiful outdoor nature of grass and trees. I hope you were able to ground yourself either way. 🙏🏾😊
@@GLesbihonest I just recently got a van to go camping in, but won't be doing that till Oct-April here in Fl. Just too hot other times. I do go beach walking , which is refreshing. Other than that, I rely on magnets [via.....mattress pad and magnetic bracelets/anklets] and indoor grounding mats to keep all those senior aches and pains away. Pool aerobics helps a whole lot too!
What are the uses? Why use for bed etc. I just use a rubber mat and shoes when working with circuit breakers and stand at a slight angle from electric box.
I do not advise to connect it to the plug because if the wiring have sort of short you will electrify yourself and also if there was a thunder it will also electrify you because you are connected to the same groud where the thunder hits.
I'm not going to disagree with you at all I would never use mine at night if I knew there was going to be rain and regardless of what precautions you take there is always a danger if you connect to the plug if I had to do this over again and if I lived on the ground floor I would just put a pipe in the ground and run a wire into the house but they won't let me do that here in my apartment building
Reminds me of the Simpson's: "And where can we get these placeboes?". The obvious concerning thing is lack of reported side-effects. Every effective medical treatment has contra-indications, side-effects, and complications. I've never heard anyone say these made anything worse. If something sounds too good to be true, it is.
Please don't recommend people use their ground wire in the plug when I measured mine it was 4 volts difference from the actual grounding rod ground 4 volts is a huge amount when you're talking about it running through your body . Plus it's going to pick up noise like an antenna and since it's right next to hot wires it's most likely almost positively picking up noise from your electrical system
@@chrissilliker8633 put a steak a copper steak in the ground and connected securely to the wire preferably a shielded cable wire bring it in the house get it close to the plug that you're trying to check and put a good connection into the ground plug and then use a voltmeter to see the difference in my house it's 4 volts I don't know how many answer but the current was but 4 volts would be a whole lot of power to be running through a somebody's body for 8 or 10 hours especially if you're trying to get well if you were trying to see how much voltage you could take without making yourself sick that would be a good thing to try but if you're trying to get well don't do that
@@terrythomas790 it's going to pick up electrical energy by being close to the other wires even if the wires are it's also going to act like an antenna and pick up all three ambient electrical waves what you need is a shielded cable going directly into the ground never put it into the ground plug of the outlet. Sitting away from any outlets in hooking up an oscilloscope to your hands you will be registering 60 HZ and it will be a lot worse if you are connected to a wire that is next to a lot of other energized wires
@@lorettaatencio7796 You would have to take a screenshot and bring it to home depot or low's. One was a battery voltage reader I believe. You need to test the electrical plug to be sure it is properly grounded. That can be bought at home depot also.
I wouldn't take off the other blades...they will support the plug in the outlet. I'd just pour some rubber in there to insulate them. Even hot melt glue should do the trick. Nice job though and thanks for sharing.
Fantastic. Thanks for sharing. I am curious to see to what extent covering the wire with various materials affect performance? The mat I purchased has some sort of plasticy coating? also, cold to the touch, which isn't that pleasant.
Could I obtain permission to upload this to my channel if I credit you and post a link to your channel? :) this is the most clear and concise video I've found so far!!
I am very excited in using a grounding mat and while in the States bought two of them, pads, not the ones with the clip at the end... arriving in Europe I see all our plugs do not have the earthing hole open!!!! They have a steel bar sticking out so what to do??? Can I take out that earthing steel bar from my European plug like you did above with the yellow plug???
I live in a 15th storey apartment which means my only option is to ground myself through the electric socket. My question is since I’m using the apartment building’s grounding system and not simply sticking a rod into the ground, do I still need to install a resistor or fuse in case there’s a surge when lightning strikes? Or will the apartment building’s grounding system do it for me? I’ve watched many RUclips videos that says to unplug when there’s lightning, but I quite often sleep through them and most probably won’t wake up in time to unplug myself, so I better not take things for granted. I do live in a lightning prone area but so far none of my gadgets have been harmed. Any advise is much appreciated.
That is a big subject of debate in the earthing community: people are always talking about it, back and forth. People have lots of opinions, but like Robb, I can't answer you either.
Hello Alfie, I'm going to be doing a video very soon on the most common questions I've received in his video and your concern about lighting which is very valid will be included.
@@RobbsHomemadeLife Oh thanks I look forward to that - have hit the bell so I don't miss it. I've just recently had some funny heart issues and a friend suggested I try grounding myself. It seems to be making a difference and narrowed my focus onto EMFs in the house, and in particular the fact that I change my sleeping position a few days before my episodes started such that my chest was a few inches away from a double wall outlet - indeed an outlet with two separate rings supplying it, daytime rate and nighttime rate. Getting pretty certain that's what triggered it but hard to know for sure.
@@RobbsHomemadeLife Just to add, I've made a bracelet from elastic wrapped with tin foil and connected that to an earth via a long wire that I can walk arond with. That was a stop gap until I got an earthing strap electricians use, which has since arrived but I've noticed it has a resistor on the line which I guess is to prevent electrocutions, hence me now wondering whether I'm being stupid connecting to the house's ground without a resistor. Questions are: would a resistor diminish the effectiveness of my bracelet or your mat, say? If so, would a fuse be better that blows below electrocution current level? If a device in the house shorts to ground, will the trip switch save me from getting that current, or is that even a concern as the current would find an easier path to ground anyway rather than going through me? Is the best thing just to connect to a dedicated rod stuck into the ground - thinking it probably is but then the lightning and resistor and question is still relevant I guess. Cheers.
Alfie, I wish I could answer your questions with authority. Electronics is my weakest skill. I have over 1200 videos about nonelectronic topics and the one video I make about grounding gets more views than the rest. I am reluctant to give people advice about something that could end up hurting them since I'm having to learn about this by reading and research myself. When I made my grounding mat . My main precaution was to purchase a tester to verify the electrical outlet was wired correctly. However, it still possible to have things go wrong. As people mentioned in the comments. As far as lightning goes, I would not trust any preventive measure and prefer to make sure I don't use any grounding mat when thunderstorms are likely. Regarding your checking electromagnetic radiation to eliminated as a cause for your heart issues. I think that is a good idea. I did something similar. I noticed I was frequently having bouts of a fib when I was in the kitchen. I purchase a device to test for EMF. What I eventually realized was even though I was frequently having bouts of a fib in the kitchen. I had ignored the fact that prior to going to the kitchen and making a meal. I had been laying down in bed. I think the process of laying down and then standing up and going into the other room was the issue and not the fact there was any stray electrical currents in the kitchen. I made a video on a fib and all of the things I tried to eliminate it. One thing that helped a little was adding more magnesium and vitamin D. Eventually though I had to get an ablation. I have been in rhythm for five years. It's a blessing.
Seriously though, I made a mat following your design for my Mother (she's 81, with terrible, incapacitating hip pain. And with her being of the generation that considers these newer/alternative health theories "suspect", I've had a difficult time getting her to consider trying it. (she won't even take aspirin, lest she might become addicted!) Unfortunately, her pain and quality of life have gotten to the point that she gave in and let me make one for her to use. After a couple weeks of using a mat on her chair, it's helped reduce her pain dramatically! Thanks for making this D.I.Y. video on how to make one of these earthing mats, it's really helped her (and by association-my own) physical and mental well being improve immensely!!!
Ace, you have no idea how happy your comment made me. Thank you so much.
My Mom was also a depression era tough cookie - even with bed sores (horrid shits they are) I had to sneak in Excedrin pain killers - I can't argue with their reluctance to succumb to the medical system actually - praise to you for your caring and attention - I will have to explore this 'grounding' stuff - sometimes I workout barefoot for that reason - interesting concepts
I made my own grounding blanket with a copper sheet and a single wire to a ground rod. Rod was probably at least 8 inches down. Had a terrible sleep so I tested the sheet with an emf reader. It was incredibly hot. The thing acted more like an antenna than a grounding blanket. Likely the ground rod needs to be several feet in the ground. People need to use caution when making their own.
I have also heard and seen several warnings about using wall plugs for these, showing heightened electrical currents.
@@kayolastna2215 Maybe just put an extension cord outside the House and down into the ground SEPARATE from the Power system - normally the Ground wire is traveling WITH the Hot and Cold power lines - all those voltages and currents and magnetism's swirling about and around the Ground wire - maybe better to avoid that completely
@@kayolastna2215 The grounding rod has to be placed 1 foot into the Earth , & you have to pour 1-2 glasses of water over the rod every 2-3 days to keep it moist.
a problem I see w/ this set up is the bolt, nut and washer appears to be zinc plated. The zinc will react w/ the copper (galvanic action). That would cause the connection to corrode. it would be best to have all like metals, ie: copper or brass screw washers and nut with the copper screen.
Lyndon you make a very good point.
I too was highly skeptical of the zink bolt, washer and nut... but i couldn't find a copper bolt, washer and nut so i used zinc and was frankly shocked that it was still conductive when i metered myself!! perhaps because even though zinc isn't conductive... the copper wire was making contact with the copper screen and the bolt, washer & nut merely secured them together... but it definitely worked. (i'm a skeptic at heart so i actually tried to make it fail but it worked... even when i touched the copper screen with ONE finger!).
why do you need the bolt/nut/washer at all tho?
You can find NO OX which is a anti corrosive agent for just this connection. Used for copper and silver wire connections. Basically metal to metal connections that may corrode.
Why can't you simply tape the wire to the mesh?? I'm trying to understand why the bolt assembly is needed at all.
Can someone help me??
USE GREEN WIRE FOR GROUNDING! Follow the code all the time to get a good mindset for future use in making anything to see it is safe. I like the idea of using a separate grounding rod outside better and attaching that. A Zink rod can work for that. It's cheaper with an (acorn nut) connection. I am an electrician.
Thanks for sharing, I appreciate your helpful and constructive input a lot. I agree with you about the green wire too.
Why is using a separate grounding rod better?
If you use a separate grounding rod, what is the best way to connect to it from inside the house? Run the wire through a window or door?
Why zinc? Isn't copper better?
Grounding rod outside is a little hard to do if you live in a highrise
Hi there ARush... I appreciate your information my question is... Would you be willing to explain how I could use an outdoor grounding rod I think you guys said a zinc rod... To intensify my grounding inside at my mat
Thank you for spreading the word about grounding/earthing. The benefits heard by countless people are phenomenal and spreading the knowledge is the best thing we can do. 😊- Live Life Grounded!
You are so welcome
I just looked at your shoes last night!! :) I hadn't known your shoes even existed, and Wow, how great! :)
@@cacatr4495 where to findi the shoes?
Here’s my 2cents worth:
Im not an electrician but I play one every day in the capacity of an apartment maintenance technician lol.
With any wiring project, if remotely possible, live wires should be red, black or blue, common or “neutral” wires white, and ground wires green (or bare).
(No, it’s not that big of a deal with what he’s doing here. It’s just a good rule of thumb. This way in the unlikely event that someone stumble upon this contraption in the future they will have a better idea of what the hell it is lol. 😁
Lastly I’ll chime in on the “safety” aspect of using the outlet v/s a remote grounding rod.
While it’s been rare in my experience (25+yrs), I have heard of a hot or neutral/ground reverse.
This is where, for example, the insulation of a wire carrying current is cut or otherwise damaged (think mis-driven nail or screw during construction) and simultaneously happens to make contact with a grounded wire and arcs. This will energize the grounded wire of that circuit.
Again, it’s rare as far as I know and I’ve never seen it personally though I have seen hot/neutral reverses.
So, although I’d be perfectly comfortable sticking a metal handled ice pick into the ground hole of every outlet I come across for the rest of my life, I’d still say that the ground-rod method would be “safer.”
Technicaly.
Hey Logan thanks a lot for taking the time to watch the video and leave some helpful comments I appreciate that very much
Always remove the flat blades from the plug. The terminals inside the plug would have voltage beside your wire terminal. Eliminate the danger. Any earthing device should never have the flat blades on the plug. Good job.
Or just remove ONE flat blade for a more sturdy connection to outlet, or cut the wires inside the plug. I live in a house, so I use a grounding rod shoved into the ground outside. It's the BEST grounding method.
@@katherinegreen9874 you squat and by squatting you generate gravity waves, use these waves to press the fart into the ground, this will start the groundfaring process that will accelerate your fetus arms into existence
@@PuppetMasterdaath144 facts
@@PuppetMasterdaath144 I guess you scared Katherine away
@@mr.blackhawk142 what grounding rod is better copper or zinc?
Great tutorial! I first heard of the original guy who tried grounding… he wrapped copper wire around a long nail and buried it in the ground. Then the wrapped the wire in that metallic tape and taped it to his mattress.
I did that on my bed but the tape would break after a few days.
I see no reason for a resistor. The ground, if done to code will go directly outside and attached to a copper rod hammered 3+ feet into the ground. So essentially it is the exact same thing to touch the mat as touching the dirt outside. If people were scared of trying this they could simply run the wire out a window and wrap it around a metal rod hammered a few feet into the dirt.
hey Moe, I appreciate your input a lot. I read the comment sections in a few videos online that covered DIY grounding devices and there were a few people that claimed a resistor was needed but I could not follow the logic.
I used a receptacle tester to test my outlets and actually found a couple that needed some work. I don't know if grounding mats actually have any health benefits but I watched a few videos and did some reading and could not find any downside. It was a fun cheap project. Thanks again.
A dedicated wire to ground would be safer.
The resistor is in case a wiring fault occurs in the house and a charge gets into the grounding circuit... a very real possibility, especially in apartment buildings if someone in the building installs a new socket incorrectly! Manufacturers of these mats do place a resistor near the wall socket on the wire (60K ohm, but I use a 100K ohm resistor). Do NOT skip the resistor. It costs like two dollars and will save your life.
@@pongmonkey we tested the electrical plug to be sure it was properly grounded before anything else. In fact we tested all of the plugs in our home because the microwave readings here are off the chart. Looking for solutions. Faraday cage for my bedroom is on the list.
@@pmail2731 could I use an anti static wrist strap I think they come with a resister I could just use the wire from one of those and it comes prewired with a alligator clip.
Love this! For a smoother finish, I would strip the wire longer, solder it flat onto the edge of the screen, then secure it under the duct taped edge.
Infrared1967, WHO 'love this'? I have seen how, in the past year or so, how people are OMITTING themselves when texting online! This is VERY disturbing to me bc I KNOW the agenda behind it. Is it 'monkey-see, monkey-do kinda thing? It looks very stupid to the very few of us with an iota of perception remaining. WHY would anyone talk like that, or type like that??? To save a NANO-SECOND of time? I really don't get it? One guy actually called me 'selfish' for using PROPER English. (pronouns) Is EVERYBODY going insane? Please illuminate me.
@@mr.blackhawk142
To Illuminate you “Narcissist is the way to describe your statement”
Everyone doesn’t use proper grammar but it matters not just as long as you understand them……..!
@@yourneck2 lolol
@@mr.blackhawk142 imagine if the sky was actually falling.
@@mr.blackhawk142 Calm the hell down. You will live longer. Focus on something more important than others communications style. Jesus.
You can use an eyelet terminal to go over the bolt (with two washers and a nut. The mat is also good for use on a pillow. double-sided tape will hold it in plsce. pillowcase goes over the assembled pillow and mat.
I made a grounding ankle bracelet out of ordinary aluminum foil folded into a ribbon & tested with my multimeter. Cost: $0.05 (or less). I made a grounding cable from a discarded 3 prong appliance cord & a surplus alligator clip, also tested.
Hey Conwell, thanks a lot for watching the video and taking the time to leave such helpful tip. Much appreciated.
Please do not use aluminum for grounding and even cooking. It is highly poisoning metal. Use Copper or Stainless steel cooking grade. Sweating under aluminum foil is salty and the salt corrodes the aluminum which is absorbed into your skin. Poison!
please elaborate on how you used it. Could you walk all around, or were you "connected" to the 3 prong plus kind of like a ball a nd chain situation?
@@superkatertot5425 You cant walk around with it. People set it on the floor when watching Bob Villa", or "How to, You Tube videos" .lol
Came for the mat instructions, stayed for the Dad jokes
Glad you enjoyed the show. No cover charge. I'll be here all day.😀
Absolutely loved the electrical jokes thrown in there and then learning about Tiffany, the wire cutter.. I have a pencil sharpener named Alicia haha n
I used the super basic method Clint Ober used when trying grounding for the first time: aluminium tape on the mattress, except I connected it to a plug, not a grounding rod. I'm in the UK where plugs all have three pins and each pin is easily removable, but initially, I left the other two pins and the fuse in. I found the experience of lying on the bed simultaneously relaxing and frazzling. When I watched this video, I took out other two pins and the fuse and when I plugged back in, no more frazzled feeling. Phew. That wasn't good.
Hey John, thanks so much for your reply. I am happy the video helped you.😎👍
@@RobbsHomemadeLife Seems I forgot to actually say, 'Thank you,' and it's much in order, because the version I had was really doing me some harm and I was wrongly trying to keep an open mind about it. So, yes, emphatically: 'Thank you.'
But I also thought it was important to let you and your viewers know that removing the other two pins, or at least the fuse, really seems to matter. Not sure why it would since the other pins weren't connected to my wire, but there it is.
I'm about to attempt this in the UK and I'm so glad I found your comment! is there any chance you may be able to upload a very brief video/picture to see what your setup looks like? I would really appreciate it!! ordering parts now - I also wonder if you just used the very basic cheap 3 pin plugs, or did you use something fancy? thanks!! :)
@@theboraxbandit9563 I'm afraid I've moved on and simply started using a standard grounding sheet and pillowcase. But I used, yes, a basic, cheap 3-pin plug and it's very easy to take the other pins out and just attach your wire to the earthing pin.
By the way, I don't really recommend the tape on mattress method as it's very hard to get the tape off afterwards! Maybe get a cheap sheet and put the tape on that, if your'e going DIY. Or look around for the copper grids some people use for DIY grounding mats and sheets.
Best of luck.
@@JohnMoseley Cheers for the heads up John! I hope your sheet is serving you well.
You got me laughing in the first 4 seconds. Love your sense of humour and thanks for your video tutorial.
Cheers from Australia 👍🏼
Hello caziko, so happy I could provide a laugh, I try to have a little fun and am happy there are a few people like you who appreciate my sense of humor, not everybody does, thanks again.😎👌
@@RobbsHomemadeLife I am sure there were a lot: more little quips you had just waiting to burst out. Cheers 👍🏼
@@RobbsHomemadeLife what about using a less than ten dollar anti-static wristband connected to a metal bedframe?
Thank you so much! It would have been great if you had showed us testing the mat. Greetings from Colombia.
Thanks for the video! Wishing your neighbour all the best after their house burnt down. Hope they are all OK.
Hello Juanita, thanks for watching the video and take the time to leave a nice comment. Deb was able to start a go fund me and actually raised a few thousand dollars to help her move.
Indeed. Sending good thoughts and comfort to your neighbor.
Yes, those bare ground wires carry so much voltage!! Ilol
@@RobbsHomemadeLifehow’d her house burn down?
Great video. Anything I can make myself, I will. Store bought stuff nowadays always seems like the cheapest possible materials at the highest possible price. A piece of copper wire wrapped around my big toe and plugged into the ground would work for me, but maybe I’ll get a bit more creative than that.
thanks Luke
yes Luke, I'm gonna buy an extension cord and remove the other wires and terminals or just take the cords off of old appliances or tools and modify. also just thinkn about drilling a hole through my wall and put a ground rod in the ground and hook my wire to the ground or even just the wire into the ground. Peace brother. frederick, Md.
the visual of a copper wire wrapped around your big toe is a super-funny visual. Lolol
How big is your toe. Does there need to be a certain amount of copper coverage to be effective.
@@JeanLucConnery even though you are joking... i've conducted a test that i saw Clint Ober do in one of his videos. i metered myself and literally touched the grounding mat with THE TIP OF ONE FINGER and the meter read i was totally grounded. So even though Luke Bourgeau was joking about wrapping a copper wire around his big toe... that is sufficient to ground someone!!
Thank you for this video....I loved/lost it after "Tiffany...the Wire Stripper"
Hey, thanks a lot for watching and commenting and having a sense of humor. I really appreciate it. Don't forget I have over 1100 other videos on many subjects and have been adding new videos each week for the last 16 years.
I didn't even have my earthing mat 3 months before it broke. So I'm making one this time.
I've got some long crocodile clips, a grounding plug, I've got a few spare rubber cqr matts I can cover in copper tape.
If you don't use a series Resistor you run the risk of shocking yourself if you come in contact with any electrically hot wire/surface while you are grounded.
The Resistor protects by limiting the current in such instance.
what type of resistor, and where do you put it? Thanks
Actually that's not right. There is no need for a resistor due the goal for this grounding mat is to provide the lowest resistence route to discharge static current present in human body. If you are worry about that scenario that you describe you should consider to implement a diferential switch or something similar but that's a whole new story...
but only if plugged into a socket, right? sounds like the best is to have a wire going out the window and connected into the earth itself, yeah?
Should have small ~100k ohm resistance due to potential of ground fault current events if plugging into an outlet. This resistance keeps you safe plus allows for good electron current draw.
This is AWESOME tutorial on how to make a grounding/earthing mat.👍🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻 I want to make one for my 80yr old mother and one for myself..instead of using a screw to attach the wire to the copper mesh i want to use copper alligator clips that i already have and then tape them like you did the screw. Also, old homes, so need to use the wire attached to outdoor grounding rod.. Again, thank you so MUCH!😊🤗
Thanks Shawna👍
You can use the "cold"
copper water supply line, as a grounding point for the cord. in an older home as well
Sending positive loving, healing energy to her!💚💚💚
Thank you Marsha.
What I would do:
Remove only the blade on the plug for the load(hot) wire. Assuming your tester says your socket it wired correctly, when facing the socket, the hot line is the upper right slot. The smaller one. Leaving the neutral blade on the plug will hold it in the socket better. Additionally, rather than using a screw and nut and introducing foreign metals, use copper epoxy to join the screen and wire, for a smoother connection. Lastly, for those asking about a stand alone grounding rod, lowes and home depot sell them on the shelf in the electrical department. They're literally a 5'-6' long copper rod that you just pound into the ground with a heavy hammer. Then get a ground rod clamp to connect the wire. How you get the wire into the house is dealers choice.
Brian thanks so much for watching and leaving helpful comments.
I bought a grounding mat and tried it for quite a long time but didn't feel it worked. I totally believe grounding works, I've been doing it outside to improve a health condition I've been dealing with and deifitnely had improvements. I'm a bit annoyed about the mat though as I bought it from a reputable place, not sure if it's the electrical system or something, but it must work so much better when you are directly on the ground rather than it going through the ground wire, system, plug, cable etc etc
Adding a 100k resistor would be a good idea in case something crazy unexpected happened in your wiring or if by chance you were touching the mat and also handling something electrical that was plugged in and you somehow touched the hot wire on that electrical device. Limiting your exposure to the current flow to a very safe less than 1milli-amp current going through your body for a 110V hot wire.
Thanks Dave, much appreciated.👍
Thanks!!! You may have saved my life. I have an adjustable bed - with current supply. I'll unplug it before using this DIY earthing mat. 😮
what does a resistor do?
would this be on pre-made mats, do you know?
Make sure the voltage rating is appropriate.
@@Earth.Centric The resistor is a small protection device that will break the path of electricity when it exceeds the rated value resistance, of that resistor. (Those colored stripes on it are how they are identified) . So using one would just be a safeguard that if somehow electricity got to that wire, the resistor will stop the flow before it reaches the mat. and in that case you will not end up grounded , forever, 6 feet under. This safety feature is in the end of the cords that come with grounding mats, not in the mat itself.
Thank you so much! I will definitely be doing this and return with results. I really appreciate reading comments too.
Hey thanks so much for watching and commenting I really appreciate that I agree with you about the comment section I have some of the best viewers and commenters on RUclips
First time coming across your channel Robb. Thank you so much for all you share, very valuable! God bless you!
Rita, thanks so much. I appreciate it.😀
In part due to this video, I made a mat for myself real quick with wire from Home Depot -30 ft of 10 strand wire for $15.
I just attached it crudely to old piece of steel window screen, ran the other end out window to railroad spike I hammered into ground. I put the screen on my bed on bare skin from low thigh down. In 5 min I felt relief from anxiety. I then slept more than I have in weeks or months.
Thing is, I need to make on for parents. I’m not really sure which copper wire is ideal. 12 strand? 8 strand? 10 strand?
I also need to figure out the resistor part, idk if it would protect in case of lightning.
Kathy, thanks a lot for watching and commenting. I appreciate it. I am going to be doing a video soon to answer the most common questions I have received in this video. I will include yours. I don't think the size of the wire is that important. So long as it is conductive. I did not use a resistor in mind, but there are people who sell commercial units that use resistors so you could duplicate what they did. Here is what I do for lightning, I go to a site called Windy.com and it gives me an accurate forecast for the weather in my area. Also, I don't normally sleep with it. But just use it in a chair while I'm on the computer. If I did want to use it overnight I would check the weather forecast. Hope this helps. I will be posting the video soon.
@RobbsHomemadeLife I read or heard that nighttime is the best time to use a grounding mat or sheet as the body is more receptive and you get ~8 hours straight of grounding.
Does it need to be copper wire?
@@RobbsHomemadeLifeThe weather men are always wrong! If they say its going to be a clear sky overnight, unplug it ! lol The fuse is good in case of some chance of electricity gets through. You'd hate to wake up dead!
Thank you sir. This solves a problem for me -- and it is safe for an old geezer with a desire to sleep better.
Good luck Gerald.
FANTASTIC video sir and thank you. 🙏🏻🙏🏻
I was going to make one for myself and thought I’d see if anyone else had done already and save me some time an effort in figuring how to go about it.
This is pretty much how I’d imagined it.
Hey Logan good luck with yours and thanks again
@@RobbsHomemadeLife
You’re most welcome my friend. 👊🏻
“Don’t buy the cheap chimpanzee tape” I nearly spat my drink out laughing so hard 😂
Adrian, thanks for watching and commenting. Much appreciated.
Likewise. Took me a second, I must be tired. Chimpanzee tape is a little better than spider monkey tape though.
Great vid that got me thinking. Thank you! I would probably opt for a banana plug instead of a broken plug. And I'd look for a less bulky connection, like crimping a grommet over the wire instead of a bolt or something.
Hey Dr., those are good ideas. Thanks for watching and commenting. I appreciate it.
I like this idea but with copper wire out a window into a copper grounding rod. I don’t want to be part of my house wiring during electrical storm or when dirty electronics are plugged in. Thank you for sharing.
I don't see anything wrong with your idea and it sounds safer to me. I live several floors up in an apartment but if I lived in my own house I would do the same as you're planning to do.
After 5 seconds of realizing that you named your Wire Stripper Tiffany, I laughed. lol
Hilarious! Apologies to all females named Tiffany. 😅😅😂😂
Thank you, for demonstrating from the plug.
Gladys thank you very much for watching the video and leaving a nice comment to let me know that the video helped you I appreciate that very much
Robb ~ I am so glad I found your channel --- such great info! Thanks so much and I just subbed. 🥰
Awesome! Thank you!
Thank you so much for sharing, it's very useful. I was contemplating to use copper tape somehow, to use for my pillowcase (my head is surrounded with all sorts of electric gadgets). Have to figure out how to do that. 🧐 Copper tape might be softer, but your mat is great for feet.
You are so welcome!
I barefoot as much as possible. This looks amazing Sir well done 👍!!!
I thanks a lot for watching and commenting. I appreciate it.
Now I know what to do with part of the 100 ft of coax cable. The other is making same rods for the garden
The 100k ohms that the commercial mats and wires have is so that if you happen to touch the hot wire at an outlet, only 1.2 milliAmps will be flowing through your body -- 120 volts/100k ohms as per Ohms law which is on the low end shock scale . With THIS homemade set up, just don't touch the hot wire. Might be dangerous. Even though it's ground, if you touch the hot wire, your body will be part of the circuit. (Yes, ground DOES go to source so might be wise to wire in a resistor).Before anyone tries this homemade stuff, study some electrical stuff first. BTW, I myself ground at night with a commercial mat and sleep better than I did.
You're awesome Robb. Thank you for the video. 🙏
Hey thanks a lot much appreciated
thank you so much for all these ideas and making this video. Much appreciated.
Glad it was helpful!
Dont use the electrical socket for an earth .there is a small interferance from the power wires behind it.its proven its not dangerous but it interferes with the earth electrons..use a stake to ground method
QUESTION?years ago I had to go to a Chiropractor bc I developed a big bump of liquid or swollen bump behind my left knee. The dr. had me ly down on my stomach while he attached a wire patch on to the bump and in 30 minutes pain was gone! I was okay for many months and then it came again. I went to the same doctor and he did the same thing for $45 -30 minutes. I was okay for many months and when it came again, the doctor wouldn't treat me? He referred me to another specialist. Question, are Tens Units somehow grounding machines? also my 92 yr old aunt who passed away knew about this- she recommended her son to go and roll in the dirt bc it would energize and balance him? Seems she knew something we didn't and from where did she learn? She was indeed a very spiritual woman who practiced her Faith faithfully
Good idea. I would crimp a lug onto the end of the wire and attach that to the bolt though, not just hope the washers hold the wire in place.
What’s a lug?
@@hardcore4476 a Lug is one of those dinglehoppers you connect to your battery terminal???
Thank you 🙏 from France. Vêtu helpful 👍
Glad it was helpful!
Gratitude for the information!
Glad it was helpful!
Simple and elegant. Thanks for making the video
Glad you liked it!
Love your video - thank you! Any updates on how it has affected your health? Would love to hear an update!
To be honest, after a while I stop using it because I had it connected to an outlet in my bedroom and I kept tripping over it. Also the health problem I had went away. So I didn't have the need to use it as much. Thanks for watching the video and take the time to leave a comment. Much appreciated.
Thank you sir. This helps solve my problem with how to make one of these.
Gerald, thanks so much.
Thx mate, great idea and cheap. Cheers Graham.
Hey thanks a lot for watching and leaving nice comment. I appreciate that.
we could also use our old satellite/cable cords for grounding too. Bc its already set up🤔
Are you referring to it being grounded? One would need to make sure that said-grounding rod was not in the same area as the underground powerline coming into the property/house, because if those two were close in proximity, the energy from the one could compromise the purity of the other, which would defeat the purpose.
Hi guys! Hope you do super well today.
I have a question about grounding - could I ground myself by wrapping a chopper wire around my ankle / wrist and wire it into dirt/ soil?
Thanks for your help!
Anouk
Yes, you could. From what I've found the Palms of your hands and Bottoms/Soles of your feet make the best connections though. I personally think that it has to due with the Skin Thickness, More Nerves, and a tendency to be a bit "sweaty" in those areas.
@@codybanks9944 Thanks so much for this info, really appreciate it! I've read somewhere you need to have two cords to be grounded - one in and one out, I guess like normal electricity needs to... Know anything about that too? :D
@@anoukanansimeditations That makes no sense. No device uses two grounding cords. The typical 3 plug outlet has 2 prongs for live, and 1 round (the green screw when wiring) grounding port. Somewhere on your property that ground line leads to a copper rod that has been pounded into the soil.
@@JohnsPrime Actually your neutral line(white wire) returns to ground through your electrical panel. The green is used for safety if there is a short. If you are positively charge, a grounding wire will allow the electrons to move to ground. One wire.
Great, I was looking for something like this. For a little added safety one could put a fuse somewhere in the wire. Thanks for posting.
Glad I could help
A fuse???? What for... What nonsense! A fuse will do nothing unless there is a current flowing!
@Bob Marshall like lightning....
Instead of stripping 1in bare wire and then bolting it down and having that not to try to cover up so you don't feel it, why didn't you just go ahead and strip back maybe 1 ft or even 2 ft of wire and place it underneath the gorilla tape that you already taped the edges down with anyway. As long as any part of the wire touches the bat it's good and he would definitely get a good connection with 12in stripped-back on The wire and gorillas taped down to the mat. This way you wouldn't be sleeping on a nut and bolt
Rick, thanks for taking the time to watch the video and leave helpful comment, I appreciate it.
That's a good idea
That's definitely in my wheelhouse. Gonna try it that way! Thanks and Thanks for Robb for the video.
praying for your friend.. my first thought was, was she using the grounding mat.. my second thought, im still making the grounding mat''
Thanks Charlie
Great video , hope this helps a lot of ppl 🙏❤️💫
I hope so too!😀
10:00 The wire itself is already a resistor so there is no need to use any "formal" resistor which is only going to make the energy discharge slower. When you walk with bare feets on the ground you don´t put any resistors in the soles of your feet, or do you ?
very good points Julio! Thanks for commenting and helping.😎
haha
Food for thought...."maybe" this is WHY people get ELECTROCUTED if they are walking barefooted on the Earth and Lightning that strikes the ground enters their body through their "NON RESISTOR" protected feet. Things that make you go....Hmmm......rofl :~)
Im assuming you are talking grounding directly to the earth, and not the house wiring?
What I did was took a set of doctor shoals insoles, some aluminum heat duct tape. You need to stick the tape full length of insoles,split and bare some speaker wire, lay it on top of tape and put another small piece of tape over exposed wire( because the adhesive on the tape is nonconductive) and either plug into wall socket or grounding rod, then I cut the toes off some socks and used them to hold in place on your feet or your arms...ect... and vwulla-vwulla your grounded,,,,
enjoy your new heath...
Thank you Darren. Much appreciated.😀😀
Great video and great comments!! Thanks!!
Sean, thanks a lot for watching and commenting. I appreciate it.
I think we should double check the house's electrical wiring before use this method of grounding. There's some electric events that can lead to an dangerous spike of voltage and/or current in the ground wire. If something crazy happened while you are conected you can die fast. Another options are a protection circuit with resistors and a fuse or varistor, or grounding the mat directly into earth by an exclusive wire.
Rodrigo, thanks for taking the time to watch and leave a comment. I made my video to show what I did and I'm not telling anyone to do the same. I encourage everyone to gather their own information before making a decision on building and using a grounding Mapp. In addition, in the video. I showed how I checked the wiring using an outlet tester. Also, if I were to make it again. I would add a resistor as many people have mentioned. Also, if I have the option I would just use a wire out my window into the ground. However, I live in an apartment several floors up and did not have that option. Thanks again.
Any hints on how to get the wire out through the window without damaging the screen (rental property)?
@@Earth.Centric The wire is thin, so couldnt you, at the corner of the screen, take a toothpick or a needle and gently move the thin screen wire, for the grounding wire. Theres usually some wiggle room with screens , so maybe you can remove the screen, place the wire out the window, and put the screen back in.?
Great video... but logically it seems the machine screw needs to be made from a conductive material. yes? no?
Sorry for the late reply, that's correct.
I wonder if a person can just get an old extension cord and cut it back and only leave the ground wire near the plug and on the other end cut it back a couple of feet and have only the ground wire showing leaving the other two wires in that 8 or 10 ft section alone so it doesn't bother and then just plug it into the outlet and then just wrap the bare ground wire around your hand or ankle while you're sitting on the sofa or chair watching TV for 20 or 30 minutes at a time?
Wouldn't this holding a bare wire for a few minutes do the same thing?
Hi Rick, I don't want to comment on your proposed grounding cord because I may not be on the same page but as far as holding the wire instead of laying on the screen. I think you get the same results. I remember reading somewhere that the best results were from the bottom of the feet or the palms of your hand. I basically just use the screen on my back sitting in a chair or propped up on a pillow. But holding it would work. I think.
I think that would work safer if the wire went outside, unless you add the resistor. On the other end , maybe get a cheap cookie sheet, and screw the wire to it, and rest you bare feet on it! But , If I ever visit, dont offer me any home made cookies!
That sounds dangerous
I think there would be more benefit if you ran a separate ground wire.
You might be right
The ground wire ends up at the same place the left spade does on the main panel and transformer. That wire is filled with harmful frequencies and if you had an oscilloscope you would see them. Unfortunately the earthing community doesn't understand that a multimeter just measures the difference in potential. Meaning if you touched a wire with 120 volts on it and attached the other probe it would read zero even though it's 120 volts......is this safe? Those with multimeters can try the experiment at home and place one probe in a 120 Volt receptacle, in the right spade, and the other probe in the right spade of another receptacle as this is the "hot" side. If it is on the same circuit it will read 0.00! if it is on another leg or phase it will read 240. The ground wire is just another pathway for electricity to flow in case the neutral is compromised.
Just curious...as I read the discussions about whether or not it is better to use the ground through the outlet or through a rod stuck in the ground...I have a question. What if there is a nearby lightning strike while using the mat? Could electricity run up the wire to the mat? And is there a way to protect against a lightning strike?
Had a nearby strike a few months ago...and several neighbors lost electronic devices...I'm glad it wasn't worse.
I can only speak for myself but I would never use a grounding mat if there was any chance of thunderstorms in the immediate vicinity. If I would have had the option I would have used a rod in the ground with the wire coming up into my window but I have several floors up in the apartment building that does not allow anything like that outside of the building
@RobbsHomemadeLife Thanks for taking the time to read and respond. I appreciate the advice and think I'll follow it! It makes sense. Thanks again, and great video.
Thanks Robb! Appreciate it ❤🤜🏻🤛🏽
Anthony thanks for watching and leaving a nice comment. Much preciated.
There is a high electrical field (EF) all around the socket ya'll put the grounding plug into that runs to the mat.
I would like to see a video where some one can show me how to put I think a resistor in in case of a lightning strike
I didn't realize these mats had any sort of medical benefits, just use them for my electronics work. One thing I'd do though is make sure that the surface of the mesh is actually non-insulated bare copper. My concern would be that it's made from enameled wire or similar to keep the mesh from oxidizing. Would be easy enough to check.
Good point John!
Electro Static Dissipation (ESD) devises use 1 Mega Ohm In-Line Resistance. This is too high for biological benefits. Grounding products only use 1 K Ohm In-Line Resisters.
Search “ Earthing” . There is a movie with research and a book
@@skarath Thank you for that info! So good to know for any future purchases.
This is amazing ,thank you so much for sharing your knowledge. could you please do a video on how to make EMF protection for smart meter or WIFI and phone please, thank you so much.
Hey thanks for watching much preciated I'm not sure how to do what you're talking about but I would if I could
I don't think a resister would do anything other then block the flow of electrons, 8f anything to put in line would be a diode to make sure the flow of electrons matains a singular direction ie not letting the electrons back flow
What would the diode specs would be?
Well, I bought the mesh and taped it but it started to curl up. I was laying on it over night. Ihad some bathroom wall plastic so cutstrips 1 in. wide and gooped them to the edge. That helped stiffen the mat but the mesh began to develop holes and tore at the edges from laying on it for just acouple weeks. I fixed them with more tape but it looks like hell now. I think I will spring for the real one.
My tape came off the edges of mine
Love this! Do you have an idea, how to make grounding in shoes?
No, sorry
Leather soles or natural materials are conductive. I ordered a pair of moccasins all leather.
I think it would be easier to have an alligator clip to clip to the fabric, with either using an electical outlet properly or grounding to outside.
I think your tip is fine. Thanks a lot for watching and commenting.
I live in a seconed story apartment. I made a home made canopy around my bed and idk if i should ground it outside theiugh the window or make a DIY outlet plug. Can you tell me exaclty step by step a list of what materials to get at home depot and how to install the ground or outlet and the safest way to go about doing it and where to put it so i dont get shocked? I'm new to this so it would really mean a lot. Thank you 🙏
I enjoyed your video.
Thank you!
Good idea and thank you for shearing. However, I do have an observation that really applies to all youtube video warriors out there. Before posting a video, try finding in your circle or family some professional, an engineer or doctor or pharmacist depending on the subject of your video to see it first. Too many transpire unprofessional-ism when executing the project, simple handling of tools, components and so on. Not to diminish the value of your idea, but to improve the presentation.
Daniel, I have over 1300 videos and I'm afraid this is not my best work. Which is unfortunate considering how popular the video has become. That's the way it works out sometimes.
I dont even trust the "professionals', mechanics, plumbers, especially doctors! How many times have they been wrong. Calling oneself a professional doesnt mean shit. But it sounds good.
The copper matt is a grounding device by itself which does not need anything else attached to it....to be used outside on the grass
If you're outside on the grass, why use a copper matt? Just take off your shoes or shirt and let your skin touch the earth.
Good stuff Rob
Hey thanks a lot for watching😃
Did you test it? I'm curious how the multi-meter numbers compare to the purchased mat. Second question... since the other two prongs are not connected to wires, i'm curious if leaving them on would make the plug more secure in the outlet? On second thought, maybe there is some current "bleeding" into the copper ground.. even though the two prongs are not connected with wires. Thoughts?
Please don't do this, you take many risks doing so, and mostly to your own life. Code for mats and wrist bands requires a 1 Meg Ohm resistor in series, and for them to be tested at least daily. Code exists for a reason - your safety. Your ground wire should be green or green and yellow, and the wire should be double insulated. The mat being copper will corrode, and is simultaneously too conductive and unreliable in the future due to corrosion, which is also a problem with your nut and bolt connection creating galvanic corrosion. I would never use just one pin in a socket from the mechanical loosening perspective, a ring tongue terminal termination screwed into the metal socket mounting screw with locking feature, and strain relief is standard practice. The commercial mats are deliberately not just raw metal for a reason, that would be too conductive, you run the risk of cross shorting devices, and yourself. If you are not concerned about the importance of complying with regulations you could ask Stockton Rush all about it.
Can anyone answer for me?: I have an 'earthing' grounding mat with cord to plug into a grounded wall outlet. I want to do a diy fix to take it with me camping. Can I just wrap som e copper wire around the metal that plugs into the socket, and then to a nail or small copper rod, to put in ground outside of camper. I'm assuming that would work ok? And does it 'have' to be copper wire? I have lots of jewelry wire wrapping wire, which who knows if it's copper inside...think it is. Can I attach to any metal, or does it have to be copper? If I can take a plain old metal fork or butter knife to stick in the ground...all the better. BTW: I use both a magnetic mattress pad, and a grounding mat on bed , and it really helps with arthritis, pain, and my blood pressure. This is why I want to set one up for when I go camping.
Joy, I think any metal will do, the thicker the better.
Hello! If you're going camping, it's the perfect time to ground naturally with the earth. It's so much better. Grounding mats are alternatives for those that don't have access to beautiful outdoor nature of grass and trees. I hope you were able to ground yourself either way. 🙏🏾😊
@@GLesbihonest I just recently got a van to go camping in, but won't be doing that till Oct-April here in Fl. Just too hot other times. I do go beach walking , which is refreshing. Other than that, I rely on magnets [via.....mattress pad and magnetic bracelets/anklets] and indoor grounding mats to keep all those senior aches and pains away. Pool aerobics helps a whole lot too!
If you’re camping and it’s warm, put your bare feet directly onto the earth. The old fashioned way of grounding to earth.
@@lukebourgeau3422 Of course! Nothing like beach walking.
What are the uses? Why use for bed etc. I just use a rubber mat and shoes when working with circuit breakers and stand at a slight angle from electric box.
Do a Google search on the health benefits of grounding or earthing.
I do not advise to connect it to the plug because if the wiring have sort of short you will electrify yourself and also if there was a thunder it will also electrify you because you are connected to the same groud where the thunder hits.
I'm not going to disagree with you at all I would never use mine at night if I knew there was going to be rain and regardless of what precautions you take there is always a danger if you connect to the plug if I had to do this over again and if I lived on the ground floor I would just put a pipe in the ground and run a wire into the house but they won't let me do that here in my apartment building
Reminds me of the Simpson's: "And where can we get these placeboes?". The obvious concerning thing is lack of reported side-effects. Every effective medical treatment has contra-indications, side-effects, and complications. I've never heard anyone say these made anything worse. If something sounds too good to be true, it is.
Please don't recommend people use their ground wire in the plug when I measured mine it was 4 volts difference from the actual grounding rod ground 4 volts is a huge amount when you're talking about it running through your body . Plus it's going to pick up noise like an antenna and since it's right next to hot wires it's most likely almost positively picking up noise from your electrical system
hey how would I go about testing my ground for voltage?
@@chrissilliker8633 put a steak a copper steak in the ground and connected securely to the wire preferably a shielded cable wire bring it in the house get it close to the plug that you're trying to check and put a good connection into the ground plug and then use a voltmeter to see the difference in my house it's 4 volts I don't know how many answer but the current was but 4 volts would be a whole lot of power to be running through a somebody's body for 8 or 10 hours especially if you're trying to get well if you were trying to see how much voltage you could take without making yourself sick that would be a good thing to try but if you're trying to get well don't do that
@@chrissilliker8633 check voltage between true ground and the outlet ground
Did you test you own outlet first? Your wiring might be messed up somewhere in that circuit. A outlet tester will tell you if its grounded.
@@terrythomas790 it's going to pick up electrical energy by being close to the other wires even if the wires are it's also going to act like an antenna and pick up all three ambient electrical waves what you need is a shielded cable going directly into the ground never put it into the ground plug of the outlet. Sitting away from any outlets in hooking up an oscilloscope to your hands you will be registering 60 HZ and it will be a lot worse if you are connected to a wire that is next to a lot of other energized wires
Robb's....I wanted to see you test your new mat.
Would someone write a NAME ist of the items he used .
@@lorettaatencio7796 You would have to take a screenshot and bring it to home depot or low's. One was a battery voltage reader I believe. You need to test the electrical plug to be sure it is properly grounded. That can be bought at home depot also.
Well done. And funny!
Kelly, thanks a lot. I appreciate that very much.
Yes good show. Thanx. But dogs and other animals are allready grounded walking on Mother Earth or do they also walk with rubber shoes ? Greetz
Cats wear boots from what Ive heard. Ground hogs are the most grounded.
Don't forget the wire fox terriers
I wouldn't take off the other blades...they will support the plug in the outlet. I'd just pour some rubber in there to insulate them. Even hot melt glue should do the trick. Nice job though and thanks for sharing.
Hey thanks a lot for watching the video and taking the time to leave helpful comment. much appreciated.
Fantastic. Thanks for sharing. I am curious to see to what extent covering the wire with various materials affect performance? The mat I purchased has some sort of plasticy coating? also, cold to the touch, which isn't that pleasant.
Hey thanks for watching and commenting I really appreciate it. I don't know if your screen will work if it has a plastic coating.
Could I obtain permission to upload this to my channel if I credit you and post a link to your channel? :) this is the most clear and concise video I've found so far!!
That sounds OK to me.
@@RobbsHomemadeLife Wonderful! cheers Robb :)
I am very excited in using a grounding mat and while in the States bought two of them, pads, not the ones with the clip at the end... arriving in Europe I see all our plugs do not have the earthing hole open!!!! They have a steel bar sticking out so what to do??? Can I take out that earthing steel bar from my European plug like you did above with the yellow plug???
I live in a 15th storey apartment which means my only option is to ground myself through the electric socket. My question is since I’m using the apartment building’s grounding system and not simply sticking a rod into the ground, do I still need to install a resistor or fuse in case there’s a surge when lightning strikes? Or will the apartment building’s grounding system do it for me? I’ve watched many RUclips videos that says to unplug when there’s lightning, but I quite often sleep through them and most probably won’t wake up in time to unplug myself, so I better not take things for granted. I do live in a lightning prone area but so far none of my gadgets have been harmed. Any advise is much appreciated.
Sun, I am sorry but I do not have enough knowledge to answer you.
@@RobbsHomemadeLife thank you for your honesty!
I believe you can also ground yourself through the metal pipes from the shower (that is if the metal pipe and continues to the ground)
That is a big subject of debate in the earthing community: people are always talking about it, back and forth. People have lots of opinions, but like Robb, I can't answer you either.
Ask the manager if any first floor units are available. lol
Thank you for the great video
Glad you enjoyed it
nice tip regaridng the copper screen. what happens to your feet if/when your garden gets struck by lightning?
Hello Alfie, I'm going to be doing a video very soon on the most common questions I've received in his video and your concern about lighting which is very valid will be included.
@@RobbsHomemadeLife Oh thanks I look forward to that - have hit the bell so I don't miss it. I've just recently had some funny heart issues and a friend suggested I try grounding myself. It seems to be making a difference and narrowed my focus onto EMFs in the house, and in particular the fact that I change my sleeping position a few days before my episodes started such that my chest was a few inches away from a double wall outlet - indeed an outlet with two separate rings supplying it, daytime rate and nighttime rate. Getting pretty certain that's what triggered it but hard to know for sure.
@@RobbsHomemadeLife Just to add, I've made a bracelet from elastic wrapped with tin foil and connected that to an earth via a long wire that I can walk arond with. That was a stop gap until I got an earthing strap electricians use, which has since arrived but I've noticed it has a resistor on the line which I guess is to prevent electrocutions, hence me now wondering whether I'm being stupid connecting to the house's ground without a resistor. Questions are: would a resistor diminish the effectiveness of my bracelet or your mat, say? If so, would a fuse be better that blows below electrocution current level? If a device in the house shorts to ground, will the trip switch save me from getting that current, or is that even a concern as the current would find an easier path to ground anyway rather than going through me? Is the best thing just to connect to a dedicated rod stuck into the ground - thinking it probably is but then the lightning and resistor and question is still relevant I guess. Cheers.
Alfie, I wish I could answer your questions with authority. Electronics is my weakest skill. I have over 1200 videos about nonelectronic topics and the one video I make about grounding gets more views than the rest. I am reluctant to give people advice about something that could end up hurting them since I'm having to learn about this by reading and research myself. When I made my grounding mat . My main precaution was to purchase a tester to verify the electrical outlet was wired correctly. However, it still possible to have things go wrong. As people mentioned in the comments. As far as lightning goes, I would not trust any preventive measure and prefer to make sure I don't use any grounding mat when thunderstorms are likely. Regarding your checking electromagnetic radiation to eliminated as a cause for your heart issues. I think that is a good idea. I did something similar. I noticed I was frequently having bouts of a fib when I was in the kitchen. I purchase a device to test for EMF. What I eventually realized was even though I was frequently having bouts of a fib in the kitchen. I had ignored the fact that prior to going to the kitchen and making a meal. I had been laying down in bed. I think the process of laying down and then standing up and going into the other room was the issue and not the fact there was any stray electrical currents in the kitchen. I made a video on a fib and all of the things I tried to eliminate it. One thing that helped a little was adding more magnesium and vitamin D. Eventually though I had to get an ablation. I have been in rhythm for five years. It's a blessing.
Can you use an alligator clip instead of a screw? Seems like it would be less lumpy
Strip 3 inches of insulation off the wire, and just tape it flat against the mesh. No lumps
Cool stuff man!
Hey thanks a lot.
How would you add an element of protection for the mat itself, to keep it clean? The store bought ones have covers you can clean
I'm not sure how that would work. I thought the skin had to touch the metal. Maybe the cloth they're using has metallic threads