Goal
To modify the physical and chemical properties of water and other materials using magnetic and high-frequency electrical fields, thereby producing a "vitalised" product that claims health, agricultural and livestock benefits.
Problem
Ordinary water lacks the alleged vitalising properties that can enhance biological functions, crop yields and animal growth.
Concept Summary
The invention consists of a two-stage apparatus. First, water passes through a constricted chamber inside an electromagnet, exposing it to an oscillating magnetic field that creates a magnetic vortex and aligns water molecules. Second, the water is subjected to high-frequency electrical oscillations delivered via metal electrodes (copper, gold, aluminium, etc.) and a dielectric capacitor filled with beeswax. The process is claimed to alter pH, resistivity, and to disperse colloidal metals, resulting in "vitalised" water that improves health and agricultural performance.
Principles
- Oscillating magnetic field (magnetic vortex)
- High-frequency electrical oscillations
- Resonance with cosmic/telluric electromagnetic waves
- Bee's wax dielectric capacitor
Scientific Domains
Materials
- Water (including mineral water)
- Bee's wax
- Copper
- Gold
- Aluminium
- Silver
- Magnesium
- Graphite
- Sulphur
Mechanisms of Action
- Magnetic alignment of water molecules
- Electromagnetic induction altering pH and resistivity
- Colloidal metal dispersion in treated water
Energy Sources
Applications
- Human health and wellness
- Agricultural crop enhancement
- Livestock growth
Claimed Performance
Improved crop yields, increased weight of fruit, enhanced livestock growth, decreased fatigue and improved overall condition in humans; measurable changes in water pH and resistivity.
Experimental Evidence
According to the article, the water was tested on hospital patients, animals, and crops with reported positive results; a 1958 opinion from the National Academy of Medicine is cited.
Replication Status
No independent replication or peer-reviewed studies are mentioned; the text only refers to the author's own experiments and a historical medical opinion.
Limitations
- Lack of peer-reviewed, quantitative data
- Claims rely on anecdotal and historical reports
- No clear mechanism for cosmic-ray influence
Red Flags
- Extraordinary health claims without rigorous clinical trials
- Reliance on historical, non-scientific endorsements
- Potential placebo effect and lack of independent verification