I agree about the tacking "health" at the end of jibberish techno stuff.
The problem is 95% of these negative ion emitters have the reciever right beside it, which only gives an effective distance of a few inches.
An extreme example of this process can be "seen" during a big thunderstorm. You can "smell" the thunderstorm coming from a few miles away. That fresh air scent is the negative ion.
The idea of the negative ion emitter is that it go throught the room and collect dust and desposit it on the reciever.
Getting back the extreme example. Think of the rain as the negative ions, as the rain passes through the air it collects the dust and the reciever, the earth, collect the dust. After the storm the air smells fresh, more negative ions than positive.
I helped design a negative ion emitter/reciever with the reciever on the other side of the room, the reciever is passive. (no power)
If you want to be influenced by positive ions, work in a poorly designed TV studio, if you're sensitive you go home with massive headaches every night.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
jan @ Jan 8th 2006 10:44PM
I agree about the tacking "health" at the end of jibberish techno stuff.
The problem is 95% of these negative ion emitters have the reciever right beside it, which only gives an effective distance of a few inches.
An extreme example of this process can be "seen" during a big thunderstorm. You can "smell" the thunderstorm coming from a few miles away. That fresh air scent is the negative ion.
The idea of the negative ion emitter is that it go throught the room and collect dust and desposit it on the reciever.
Getting back the extreme example. Think of the rain as the negative ions, as the rain passes through the air it collects the dust and the reciever, the earth, collect the dust. After the storm the air smells fresh, more negative ions than positive.
I helped design a negative ion emitter/reciever with the reciever on the other side of the room, the reciever is passive. (no power)
If you want to be influenced by positive ions, work in a poorly designed TV studio, if you're sensitive you go home with massive headaches every night.