Re: Korean electric water breakthrough

mbgupta@julian.uwo.ca
Sun, 27 Sep 1998 16:46:09 -0400

Jean Pierre, thx for this wonderful tit bit, somehow I did not see it earlier.

John Crane of the Rife fame has patented similar devices for killing
bacteria in large gasoline (petrol to you Europeans) reservoirs in the US
army... apparently the Nixon administration of that time wanted nothing to
do with it as by doing so they would step on their oil friends! This is
documented in on a Rife technology video tape that I have.

For the last couple of years I have not used laundry soap in my house. And
can vouch that cleaning with modified water works well - maybe not quite as
good as lots and lots of soap but very close. The easiest way to reduce
surface tension is to use piezoelectric materials. There are a number of
device that are already on the market with money back guarantees. I have
tried 2 types both work. How well they work may depend on the water in your
area?? One is a puck type of affair that is filled with piezo ceramic
beads and another is a supper saturated water (solution of some
piezoelectric salt chemical) ball. The later works almost as good as soap.

http://ww.total.net/~jerryg/geowash9.html

I am in the processes of developing a simple water tensision device will -
post if it is successfull. Maybe I will post even if it is not successuful
so you can tell me what needs improvement!

Chris Gupta

At 01:45 PM 8/31/98 +0200, you wrote:
>Hi all ! This piece of news was published last Friday (August 28th) in the
>French daily paper Liberation, written by its Seoul correspondant Stephane
>Lagarde. A quick Net search seems to indicate the news has not been relayed
>yet by American media. Excerpts from the article :
>
>"Researchers from ShindongBangs Corporation, a partner of Daewoo
>Electronics, announced they have a process that transforms water into a
>cleansing agent. 7 years of research and 3 million $ were necessary. The
>process is called Midas, a name from Greek mythology, "because changing the
>nature of water is God's domain", said inventor Kim Hee-Jung." (snip)
>
>"The secret of this discovery is well kept so far. Kim Hee-Jung only
>provides general comments. "Water passes through a valve covered with
>electrodes. Electric shocks transform matter. Water thus catalyzed has the
>same properties as a detergent." (snip)
>
>"Tests have been done in front of journalists and engineers. It works."
(snip)
>
>"It's not a first attempt for ShindongBangs. Earler this year, its factories
>produced a desinfectant and an insecticide without chemistry, using the same
>water catalyzing process. The desinfectant is presently used in several
>Korean hospitals. University of Seoul's Department of Medicine even
>recommended its use for the prevention of liver cancer. For the insecticide,
>results are less evident. "The system is costly and farmers cannot afford
>it" admits the company."
>
>"The invention was originally developed by a small venture company, Kyungwon
>Enterprise Co. It comes as a breath of oxygen for crisis laden Korea. Big
>conglomerates smelled the potential and battled to acquire the license, but
>Daewoo were first on the line and wants to make it the biggest Korean export

>in 1999. After a series of articles in local dailies, the company is
>overwhelmed by calls.Chang-In-Sang, spokes-person for Daewoo Electronics,
>tries to calm the enthusiasm. "We have tests to do in September and we must
>down-size the system to integrate it in ordinary washing machines."
>
>"If all goes well, the revolutionary machines will be on sale early next
>year. Korea already exports 2 million out of the 47 million washing machines
>sold each year, and hopes with this system to multiply that number by 10."
>(end of article excerpts)
>
>Now, some footnotes of mine :
>
>1 / Electrically "magnetized", "activated", "dynamized", "structured" waters
>have been around since the beginning of 20th century. So far they were
>distinctly fringe affairs, well outside mainstream science Now, if an
>industrial giant like Daewoo gets into the act, the whole field could reach
>a new level of recognition. High time !
>
>2 / Back in 1959, French water researcher Jeanne Rousseau took a patent (for
>France, Germany, Switzerland and UK) on a vortex device (2 rotors with
>vertical axes turning in opposinte directions) which produced water that
>could clean dirty laundry in 5 minutes without detergent. Cleansing and
>toxin elimination effects were also found on human subjects - on skin,
>intestines, bladder. Development was begun, then interrupted due to
>administrative hassles and threats of lawsuits for "illegal practice of
>medicine", and Ms Rousseau was financially ruined. (Now she's a charming old
>lady and mayor of her little town in Brittany, and she's not involved any
>more. The patents are public domain).
>
>3 / The Korean process reminds me (except for the insecticide claim) of the
>Japanese and Korean devices for "Microwater" or "Superoxyde water", that
>produce 2 kinds of water, alkaline water for human consumption and acid
>water for cleansing and antiseptic properties. Bit of a patent rip-off
>somewhere ?
>
>4 / BTW, Jacques Benveniste once told me that he had tried lots of
>"activated waters" in his experiments of electromagnetic "memory imprinting"
>on water, that he never noticed any effect, except for this Japanese
>Microwater device, whose alkaline water definitely enhances the effect...
>
>Well, there's no end to water's wonder stories !
>
>---------------------------------------------------------------------------
>Jean-Pierre Lentin
>---------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>
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