Quote:
Originally Posted by fenixdigger
I must have been mistaken. By chance have you been involved in atomic weapons or fissionable materials? Are you saying that elements do not have a unique
frequency based on their atomic make up?
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Hi fenixdigger,
I also believe that elements can be detected from a long distance by using electronics which can recognize and measure isotopes of the element. In fact this has been done for decades using electronic machines that find a variety of buried metals. And you are correct, the energy from these isotopes is minuscule to the point that the background noise makes it hard for the electronics to see the signal from the isotopes. Yet there are working electronic detectors that can locate gold and other elements from many miles away using gamma spectroscopy methods. Even the best of these electronic instruments has to deal with the background noise and other interfering energy signals, but modern electronics could be used to improve the detection efficiency.
But I seriously doubt that H3Tec will ever detect any isotopes for the simple reason that they are using fake electronics.
You can see they connected a grounded wire to a dowsing rod, and claimed this is used to send out a signal up to 10 miles that "excites the isotope" that you can select using their software.
Read here and down to see there is a single ground wire connected to a dowsing rod... no signal at all:
http://www.geotech1.com/forums/showt...972#post119972
How can a grounded dowsing rod compare to a gamma scintillator with its classifying spectroscope in a satellite, or in a portable ground unit?
Are we expected to believe that a grounded dowsing rod is "exciting" isotopes in a grid up to 10 miles square?
If so, then why would H3Tec claim the isotopes are excited by the signal coming from the locator?
Why wouldn't they tell us the truth... that they expect us excite the isotopes for 10 miles by holding holding a grounded dowsing rod?
And why would the owner of H3Tec tell us they cannot find silver bars if their locator is set for the isotope found in silver coins?
http://www.geotech1.com/forums/showt...7892#post87892
http://www.geotech1.com/forums/showt...7935#post87935
This is an outright lie. Silver coins and bars both have the same percent of each silver isotope regardless of how they were manufactured or what they are alloyed with.
That excuse cannot work to explain why the locator fails to find silver.
I am with you. I think there are undiscovered methods to find buried metals at long range by detecting isotopes.
But from what I see, The H3Tec people are living out their Startreck fantasy dream of a treasure tricorder that they expect their customers to finance by buying their grounded dowsing rods.
All that other crap on the circuit board appears to be there only to convince people it is really is a tricorder, and is worth a lot of money.
Did you ever consider that if you removed the batteries from the H3Tec locator, you would have found the same results as you did with them connected?
Best wishes,
J_P