Funfinder
04-16-2010, 05:46 PM
If such a LRL-producer claims someone can find Gold or whatever from a distance, put a probe to this distance and try if you can find it. Repeat this test a few times for going shure!
If it doesn't work sue such betrayers because they sell not working stuff or at least get your money back. Every new electronical piece of **** has at least an 1 year warranty and has to work as described!
This is not astrology or other PSI and ghosts-nonsens - it's about working or not working devices!
And it's very easy to find out if such a device does what it claims or not! If it doesn't work the seller is a liar and betrayer - it is so simple!
It is not about detecting something what is not available, it is about putting gold, silver or whatever on some place and control if the detector finds it or not. This is no expensive wonder-medicine that could or could not work, it is a very simple provable thing.
So what's all the fuss about? Test it before buying and if it won't work it's a fraud. Nobody can sell an empty shoe-box and claim it's a treasure-chest with invisible gems!
All those offers are public, with open addresses and prices. So for the justice it's very easy to hunt them down and take those "fantasy-inventors" out once and for all if their stuff doesn't hold what it promises for often a huge amount of money!
I would never buy any LRL without proving tests before. Pseudowaves and bionic-stuff. The human body can't even recognise very strong waves of an emitting radio-antenna nearby, so how it should detect stuff that is 100m away?! By magic, by demonic help, by "bionic sensitivity"??? Absolutly ridiculous.
If some elements really should radiate at a special frequency or can be brought to interference to special rays this is provable, if an electronic device claims it can find the right location. Because such device doesn't move by magic but by measurable forces.
Put the device on a table and a goldring behind it and look if it turns on its own in this direction. If not, throw it away and sue the sellers *ss off! If you don't do this, you indirectly support such types for betraying further and further more people!
I really have no idea how it is possible such "not working devices" can be sold at all, but even kellyco offers "Anderson Rods" for a high price. What about those people dreaming at night who buy such stuff? That they are now become a great fortune-teller or what? That their hands will become magic? Stupidity to the hilt!
If it doesn't work sue such betrayers because they sell not working stuff or at least get your money back. Every new electronical piece of **** has at least an 1 year warranty and has to work as described!
This is not astrology or other PSI and ghosts-nonsens - it's about working or not working devices!
And it's very easy to find out if such a device does what it claims or not! If it doesn't work the seller is a liar and betrayer - it is so simple!
It is not about detecting something what is not available, it is about putting gold, silver or whatever on some place and control if the detector finds it or not. This is no expensive wonder-medicine that could or could not work, it is a very simple provable thing.
So what's all the fuss about? Test it before buying and if it won't work it's a fraud. Nobody can sell an empty shoe-box and claim it's a treasure-chest with invisible gems!
All those offers are public, with open addresses and prices. So for the justice it's very easy to hunt them down and take those "fantasy-inventors" out once and for all if their stuff doesn't hold what it promises for often a huge amount of money!
I would never buy any LRL without proving tests before. Pseudowaves and bionic-stuff. The human body can't even recognise very strong waves of an emitting radio-antenna nearby, so how it should detect stuff that is 100m away?! By magic, by demonic help, by "bionic sensitivity"??? Absolutly ridiculous.
If some elements really should radiate at a special frequency or can be brought to interference to special rays this is provable, if an electronic device claims it can find the right location. Because such device doesn't move by magic but by measurable forces.
Put the device on a table and a goldring behind it and look if it turns on its own in this direction. If not, throw it away and sue the sellers *ss off! If you don't do this, you indirectly support such types for betraying further and further more people!
I really have no idea how it is possible such "not working devices" can be sold at all, but even kellyco offers "Anderson Rods" for a high price. What about those people dreaming at night who buy such stuff? That they are now become a great fortune-teller or what? That their hands will become magic? Stupidity to the hilt!