Wayne.B wrote:
On 28 Mar 2006 09:30:29 -0800, wrote:
Nanopulser (tm) retails for $90, and a single unit will condition all
of the batteries in a bank. (The 24-volt unit retails for $130.)
I may be a skeptic when it comes to gizmos, gadgets, and miracle cures,
but I know all I need to know about Boat Electric. If Lori and her crew
have tested the Nanopulser (tm) and found it effective as advertised,
that's good enough for me. I find a simple test on the concrete floor
of the Boat Electric warehouse more persuasive than 50-pages of
scientific equations assembled by some testing laboratory or a
"testimonial" letter written by Heaven Only Knowswho.
Old technology at this point. Walmart has been carrying a battery
charger for several years that has a "Desulphate" setting which works
pretty much the same way (about $80). It does work up to a point, and
you also get a battery charger thrown in for good measure. West
Marine has a similar unit with similar features but for more $$$.
The charger with the desulfate setting is designed to pump a lot of
juice through the battery in a short period of time, thereby stressing
the electrodes. That would, IMO, be the primary difference between the
slow and steady low stress use of this device or the relatively faster
and more dramatic application of a lot of raw voltage.