Most Helpful Customer Reviews
87 of 91 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Doesn't look great - but the Jury's Still Deliberating, March 11, 2010
This review is from: EMF Neutralizer (Health and Beauty)
I have to say I had/have high hopes for this product because cell phones are just plain deadly. The EMFs that comes from them - particularly from the ear piece is very strong. At the same time I bought The Neutralizer stickers, I purchased an EMF detector. I received them both a few days ago and proceeded to go around the house with the EMF reader first. That was a 'wake up' call in itself! It's very good to know and see/hear for yourself how the gauge beeps and goes off the charts into the red as you hold it near; the refrigerator, the microwave, electrical outlets, lighting. And it seems to be strongest right where there are electrical components - for example where you turn on the lamp and all of the buttons on the microwave. So we went around hunting EMFs and finding them all around - though they did seem to be strongest only out to about a foot from the appliance. There were 'hot zones' in various places, like in the laundry room where the electrical outlet box is. I do laundry as fast as I can now! Anyway, this review is not about the EMF reader, but that is to say that I had waited to try The Neutralizer out on my cell phone until after I checked it out without the stickers near. Well, it was about as bad as the microwave! Especially right in front of the ear piece. The speaker that you hold right onto your ear as you talk on the phone. I have a Blackberry Tour and I'm going to be using speaker phone or Bluetooth from now on! The EMFs were through the roof. So I opened my Neutralizer package and stuck one sticker right over the ear piece. Measured the EMFs with the detector and again, beeping and in the red as if there was nothing there. So I tried another sticker, overlaying it where the beeping was most incessant - still no difference whatsoever. Attached the 3rd and still not even an indication that there was anything there at all. I felt pretty disappointed. Like I spent over $20 for 3 pretty holographic stickers, which is exactly what they look like. Just a paper sticker - apparently. Nevertheless... I have all 3 on my phone! Just in case LOL! And I will be getting that Bluetooth. Interestingly though, I also experimented with a couple of other things. One is the Scalar Energy Quantum Pendant, sold here on Amazon, and the other was the Qlink pendant. When I held the Qlink over the ear piece, it actually did have an effect on the EMFs. It stayed out of the red zone as long as I held the pendant right onto the ear piece, with just a few beeps here and there as if the EMFs were sneaking around it because it was hard to hold a plastic thing in one place with one hand very easily. Still, when I was wearing the pendant, there was no lessening of the EMFs coming from my phone held close to me. With the Scalar Energy pendant it was definitely noticeable. There was NO beeping at all as if the pendant was impenetrable to the EMFs. Again though, when I was just wearing it, I still got strong energy pollution warnings from the reader. So... if someone can invent a scalar energy phone guard contraption - I'm sure I will buy that too! Or better yet, a full-body suit of armor. Oh also - since anyone visiting this type of product are wanting to know what to do about this problem too. Another thing I found while doing my science experiment around the house, is that the metal magnet clips that I keep on my fridge REALLY sent the EMF reader off the charts. I tested all of them and they all went crazy as I held the reader close. I've removed them all since and the regular magnets don't seem to amplify as those metal things do. So, just food for thought if you have any metal things on your fridge or around appliances. The metal really does seem to amplify and expand the energy emitted quite noticeably. Fridge, microwave, circuit box and florescent ceiling lights were the worst - all in the kitchen! Stand back from the stove at least a foot when you cook and LEAVE the kitchen when/if you microwave! I tested that too and the EMFs went from a foot away to almost filling the space in front of the microwave 4 to 5 feet away.
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21 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Why EMF detectors do not reveal changes when using the Neutralizer, May 21, 2011
This review is from: EMF Neutralizer (Health and Beauty)
I am so glad that people who have gone to the effort to test the "effectiveness" of the Neutralizer have posted their findings here! Unfortunately the error is that the Neutralizer does NOT eliminate EMFs (electromagnetic frequencies) at all! No, it neutralizes them. So, an EMF detector will not and can not show a change between readings taken before and then after application of the device (the Neutralizer). What the Neutralizer is doing is harmonizing the disharmonic arrangement of the EMFs. It is the disharmonic waves which are the culprit here, not the EMFs themselves. Harmonic waves are not harmful because they are in their neutral/ natural state. Therefore they will not disrupt your DNA like disharmonic waves will. As a clinician I was a great skeptic of this whole thing too! That is until I kept investigating and turning up more and more evidence. That evidence, from research done by others (third party, independent research with no conflict of interest) and my own observation in my clinic showed me the efficacy and effectiveness of this product.
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10 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Educated people are ROTFLOL, February 26, 2011
This review is from: EMF Neutralizer (Health and Beauty)
These things fail on every level. The "problem" they supposedly solve is paranoia, and little passive stickers wouldn't prevent a real hazard even if it was a problem. These things are like driving a tent stake into the sand to block tidal waves, AND doing so when you live in a desert. And yet there would STILL be desert-dwelling people posting positive reviews in the Sports & Outdoors section claiming that their home hasn't been flooded since they installed the Wave Guard Tent Spike. And of course there would be nutty websites fabricating "science" to prove that they work. Go tell an RF engineer that you paid twenty beans for this sticker. Bring the package so they can read the sales pitch on it. Also call an ambulance in advance, because they will probably pass out from hysteria.
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