Andrey, i don't think people know how much work you've put into these BBMPulsers! This goes to show that buying it fully assembled is the best decision! There's so many possibilities. Thank you for all you do and share.
@XenXenOfficial PEMF is used for many things 1. To recharge cells, improves their functionality, low charge cells becoming target for different pathogenic fungi. 2. To shrink tumors 3. To supress pains 4. To deactivate viruses 5. To kill bacteria infections 6. To heal bones Strong PEMF is like your personal doctor . I use it daily for different things. Beautify is that it has almost no negative side effects, yes there are some cases where it's not recommended to use but for the most of the time it can be used anywhere on the body anytime for as much as needed
Nice. I could've used this 6 months ago. ;-) I love the old brute-force soldering iron. What Temperature do you heat it to? I'm thinking 340°-350°C? I had to use a torch to supplement the heat from my iron, but it's a delicate process to heat the strips without charring the board.
Nice to see you again Andrey
Andrey, i don't think people know how much work you've put into these BBMPulsers! This goes to show that buying it fully assembled is the best decision! There's so many possibilities. Thank you for all you do and share.
So what is it used for? I understand it creates huge magnetic pulses but what is the actual use case for it?
@XenXenOfficial PEMF is used for many things
1. To recharge cells, improves their functionality, low charge cells becoming target for different pathogenic fungi.
2. To shrink tumors
3. To supress pains
4. To deactivate viruses
5. To kill bacteria infections
6. To heal bones
Strong PEMF is like your personal doctor . I use it daily for different things.
Beautify is that it has almost no negative side effects, yes there are some cases where it's not recommended to use but for the most of the time it can be used anywhere on the body anytime for as much as needed
Nice. I could've used this 6 months ago. ;-)
I love the old brute-force soldering iron. What Temperature do you heat it to?
I'm thinking 340°-350°C?
I had to use a torch to supplement the heat from my iron, but it's a delicate process to heat the strips without charring the board.