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Old 12-29-2011, 01:26 PM
Mike(Mont) Mike(Mont) is offline
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Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 2,124
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Sounds like you need some help here. First off, dowsing ability is not required. Yes, a person needs to develop some sensitivity to their own body response, but that is not dowsing. Dowsing is mental discrimination and takes many years to learn.

I have never been a fan of hand-held frequency machines. It is all too easy to pick up stray signals. My suggestion is to place the device on the ground or table with the antenna pointing upwards. Now get one or two L-rods and walk around the device about ten feet away and try to detect the signal line between the transmitter and the target. Some people say to start with a visible target (at least twenty feet away from the transmitter) and just go through the motions of allowing the L-rods to cross when you cross the signal line. Pay attention to any body response you feel. After a few times with the visible target then try to find a hidden target. Start with a small search area, maybe only ten feet by ten feet until you start to have some success. Then move up to a larger area maybe twenty feet by twenty feet. Mark the lines where you got a response. Don't spend too much time on each search. After five minutes stop the search and see where you went right and where you went wrong. This is going to take a few weeks of daily practice before you are ready to go out into the field. Sometimes you are not going to be able to find the target, so don't get frustrated if you fail. Don't try too hard and don't fixate on the rods. Be aware of your body response. If you practice, it will come to you. If you have a handheld transistor AM radio, tune it to an empty channel and hold it near the antenna. You shoulkd be able to hear the tone that is being transmitted. If not, your device is faulty.
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