Q-Link Pendant Deep Dive and Teardown: Is It a Scam?

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  • Опубліковано 13 вер 2020
  • In this video I talk about the Q-link pendant, the claims they make about what it does and how it does it and their claims about tests and studies. I researched their claims and I cut apart the pendant. Below are links to two of the studies I mention. This isn't something I'll be doing all the time. The content on my channel isn't going to change, this is a one-off.
    www.researchgate.net/publicat...
    www.sciencedirect.com/science...
    Update: People keep posting a link to the abstract of a study that supposedly "proves" the Q-Link works. First of all, it's one of the main studies I talk about in the video. Second, it's literally linked in the description. Third, it is a completely fraudulent study that steals the data from a legitimate study that has nothing to do with the Q-Link, adds some garbage about the Q-Link and then published in an alternative medicine journal as if it was a separate study. It is a complete fraud and it is despicable.
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  • @bigtb1717
    @bigtb1717  2 роки тому +69

    Update: People keep posting a link to the abstract of a study that supposedly "proves" the Q-Link works. First of all, it's one of the main studies I talk about in the video. Second, it's literally linked in the description. Third, it is a completely fraudulent study that steals the data from a legitimate study that has nothing to do with the Q-Link, adds some garbage about the Q-Link and then published in an alternative medicine journal as if it was a separate study. It is a complete fraud and it is despicable.

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  2 роки тому +20

      @@rickwells9929 I did wear it, 24 hours a day for over a week. Nothing. I also have an EMF meter on order because people keep claiming an EMF meter "proves" it works. I'll be testing that and sharing my results.
      Someone else brought up Amazon reviews, but for a product like this, that isn't a good argument for it working or not working. It's not like a camera that doesn't take pictures, a shirt that doesn't fit or a fan that barely pushes any air. This product is marketed just like every snake-oil product ever: With vague claims and a HOST of supposed, possible, SUBJECTIVE benefits. It's not like it claims to definitively fix a specific, objective problem, because then if it didn't fix that problem, people could immediately say it doesn't work. If it definitively claimed you would never get heartburn again, as soon as any wearer got heartburn they would be like "Huh, this thing doesn't work."
      But all the claims are about how you will subjective feel. If someone wears it for a while and is looking for something to attribute to it, they will find something. Everyone's mood and health varies day to day for a million reasons. Eventually they will find something they can point to and say "Aha! I slept a bit better last night" or "Huh, I didn't get frustrated with my coworkers today" or "I feel like I had more energy today" and bam, they attribute it to the Q-Link and the Q-Link gets another testimonial and another positive Amazon review. It doesn't actually have to do anything. That's why products that seem to have claims to help with just about everything regarding health and wellness is a multi-billion dollar a year industry, and yet everyone still seems to have the same problems they always had. But they continue to sell.
      Placebo and confirmation bias can easily explain it. It's how all snake-oil products gain testimonials and reviews. Some people may actually feel a bit better due to placebo and lots of people probably just attribute random things to it because that's how our minds work. Heck, the number of positive reviews on Amazon itself is a factor. If someone even has a slight idea that "well, all those other people say it works, so it must do SOMETHING" then they will wear it for a while and chances are, they will eventually find something to attribute to it.

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  2 роки тому +12

      @@rickwells9929 Quick story. A friend of mine used to have major back pain that would come and go. He'd be okay for a couple months, then one morning he would wake up and be barely able to move for a week and in pain for a long time after that until he finally started to feel better. Then one morning he'd wake up and start the cycle all over.
      He hasn't had this happen in a couple years. His back has been pain free. He does exercise regularly, so maybe that finally strengthened his back muscles enough to keep things in line. Or maybe he started sleeping a bit different without realizing it. Maybe any number of things. But what if he'd happened to start wearing a Q-Link a couple years ago? If he had, he would probably be in this comments section telling me I was an idiot and it totally works and if not for the Q-Link he might be laying in bed, unable to move right now. And that's all it takes to create a die-hard fan of a product like this. With how vague and varied the claims are for this device, there is no reason something like that couldn't be attributed to it.
      I can't help but come back to the point that there are no objective claims about the Q-Link, so there is no way for it to "not work." Meaning, there is no way to point to it and be like "See, it didn't work!" Because the excuses will just come out that the person didn't wear it long enough, or that they aren't EMF sensitive enough, or that they wore it over their clothing instead of against their skin, or whatever someone can concoct in their mind as to why it might not have worked "for them." No objective claims, so no way for it to "fail." But on the other hand, all it takes is for someone to attribute something positive to it and suddenly it "works."

    • @annonymous9063
      @annonymous9063 2 роки тому +3

      @@bigtb1717 so your blood work before wearing was identical as after?

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  2 роки тому +9

      @@annonymous9063 Who said anything about blood work? I'm supposed to "feel" better. It's supposed to potentially make me sleep better, have more energy, feel calmer, think more clearly, feel more centered, be in a better mood, have less pain, heal faster, be more focused and stuff like that.
      What would I even be looking for in my blood work? Have any of the people who claim it works shown before and after blood work? If I sent my blood to a local medical lab, what would I even tell them to test for?
      This thing is supposed to resonate with your natural frequencies and interact with your "bio-field." I know Robert Young (not a "Dr") made claims on his website (where he sells expensive diagnoses and "treatments" based on looking at people's blood) claimed he could see a difference in "blood terrain." But that is based on his untested, unconfirmed, non-repeatable, non-verifiable claims about blood. So if that is where you are going with this question, I hope you can provide some kind of testable, objective metric against which my blood could be compared, and what change should be expected from the Q-Link. Otherwise this question falls into the same category as SO MANY others on this video of "but what if..." with nothing behind it. What is the claim? Where is the evidence it actually works, vs. smugly expecting skeptics to provide proof it doesn't work (which isn't how the burden of proof works, by the way)?
      I showed that their evidence that it works was a bunch of BS and outright lies. I wore it and felt nothing. I cut it open and showed that there is nothing inside that could do anything they claim unless it's magic or possessing some physical properties as yet unknown to all of science. Sure, it has good reviews on Amazon and some people say it "works" for them. Anecdotes and personal testimony has been selling snake-oil for centuries. Please tell me how this product is any different.

    • @BrentWalker999
      @BrentWalker999 2 роки тому +9

      @@annonymous9063 he opened it up. He showed you there is nothing there.
      What don't you get!?

  • @WereAlreadyHere
    @WereAlreadyHere 2 роки тому +18

    To be fair you didn't need to open it to know that's what it was, that's exactly what they claim it is... A silicon wafer wrapped in 70 feet of fine copper wire.

  • @Contracrostics
    @Contracrostics Рік тому +11

    Thanks for this video. I know it's not your usual style, but as an educator I find resources like your investigation here to be extremely useful. A lot of people have brought me a lot of stuff (packaged with assertions) over the years that I've needed to dive into to even be able to talk about. I thought it interesting that you turned up Biowell in your research here; that's a much deeper rabbit hole than Q-Link and it winds up going all the way back to the misuse of very simple Kirlean photography and the concept of biophotons (which are real, but they count on us misunderstanding them). It was a monumental task to sort out, and my only hope is that people follow your example and more and more will begin to do their own due diligence and source checking, because it's the only way. Nobody wants to have been lied to or taken advantage of, but there is a huge stigma with that happening because in modern culture we have a habit of blaming the victim for what was perpetrated upon them. So cheers, let's continue to bolster the responsibility of intellectual self-defense whilst avoiding placing blame on those who got taken advantage of. It's not their fault, but they have the responsibility to do what you did here.

  • @Redeemed52597
    @Redeemed52597 Рік тому +15

    Excellent, investigative journalism! Thank you for helping me convince relatives to avoid this junk scam!

    • @sfkdad
      @sfkdad Рік тому

      Not excellent investigative journalism. You researched the wrong companies product. Dr.Robert Young has resesrch, actual live blood microscopy of the effects.

  • @MrMonero
    @MrMonero 3 роки тому +13

    Very well done bud. Super video and probably saved a lot of folks a lot of money.
    Yes placebo is real but people can now look to get the placebo effect from actual real things such as maybe sitting by the sea or a waterfall to feel healthy. Walking in the forest, listening to birds, grounding themselves etc..
    This video is the product of work that has value to the world. Best wishes to you 🙌🏼

    • @taltosalmos7067
      @taltosalmos7067 3 роки тому +3

      I don't think those things you mentioned has anything to do with placebo effect. Nature heals you even if you decline to believe in it. These gadgets can heal you if you decide to believe in it. Also, because you will concentrate on yourself and probably eat one less muffin for next breakfast. Placebo effect is a very powerful force. Why do you think governments put those sick people on cigarette packs. Some people can't give up and get real cancers because they believe in those pictures.
      There was a time when there wasn't one tribe,nation or race in all corners of the world who didn't believe in some God/Gods. Look at how rapidly the Godless, fateless, science believing West is fading into online emptiness.
      Besides how do you wrap a "waterfall" around your neck or carry the forests and bird songs with you 24/7?
      I agree $100 is steep for this pendant but if the return rate is only 2% that means that 98% saved a lot on medication and on sleepless nights.
      You shouldn't buy one even if it was $2. As for me, I'm very susceptible to my own thoughts and I will buy one. Probably not this one. After watching this video this pendant lost much of it's merits of "influence generating mystical power" LOL.

    • @DivineVortex
      @DivineVortex 2 роки тому +1

      Very well done. He didn’t even test it with a meter beefier he destroyed it. I tested with an EMF meter and it worked. He is an idiot. Not scientific at all.

    • @MrMonero
      @MrMonero 2 роки тому +1

      @@DivineVortex glad you tested it, can you post the video here then. Thanks look forward to it 👍🏼

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  2 роки тому +1

      Just FYI, I have a second Q-Link (I got a buy one get one deal). I ordered an EMF meter and will be testing it. If you would care to explain your testing methodology, meter and settings used and your results, I'm sure people would be very interested.

    • @standardtuning4guitars423
      @standardtuning4guitars423 Рік тому +1

      has anyone thanked you for saving them money in real life? if not why you think you are helping someone here?

  • @neurodivajewelz
    @neurodivajewelz 2 роки тому +12

    Thank you so much for this review! Very in depth and really thorough!! I was considering spending a lot of money and you just saved me $$$$$$ in this time where inflation is crazy. Thank you again!!

  • @Joy-ym3mx
    @Joy-ym3mx 3 роки тому +5

    Fabulous & very thorough research🤩👌 which you actually tore apart an over priced q-link. Thanx for saving many of us 100's of dollars...!! AND that miniscule so-called disk is a JOKE that won't do anything!!!

  • @jek__
    @jek__ Рік тому +14

    A simple passive coil of wire does interact with emfs in that it will absorb magnetism that has a frequency that correlates with the resonant frequency of the geometry and thickness of the coil, if you attach a coil of wire to a capacitor it can spit back frequencies that get project at it, if they match the right one. This is how some of those anti-theft devices work. I think thats where the vague idea that these could be doing something comes from, and while they could be doing something, they are also quite certainly a scam. Whatever they are doing or not doing could be accomplished by the components of a $10 charging brick, and these sell for $100-$3000. I wonder, is that even a coil of wire? For it to be a coil it has to be coated wire, I suspect it might just be naked wire, rendering that thing into a loop of stranded wire. If there was anything to this technology it would be all over maker spaces, there would be 3d printable models with DIY tutorials on how to make it yourself, not sold exclusively by a company who spends so much money on brand image

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  Рік тому +3

      I did suspect it might be uncoated wire. I tried testing for continuity with a meter once I had enough of the plastic chipped away that I could access the wire. It did seem to be coated wire. It was tough to be 100% certain because it is entirely molded into the clear plastic part of the pendant. I tend to lean toward it being enameled magnet wire, but I can't be positive.
      I absolutely agree that a coil of wire will absorb and interact with magnetism. It's a well-known and well utilized property in electronics. However, even in your example you point out that the coil has to be connected to a capacitor in order to achieve the desired result. My point was that a coil of wire by itself, connected to nothing, will do almost nothing.
      It would be nice if the company would just say how this is supposed to work. But positive claims can be tested. And like all, good snake-oil salesman, they are careful to avoid positive, testable claims.

    • @rgw5991
      @rgw5991 Рік тому +3

      You are right... Perhaps you are oversuspicious, but you aren't undersuspicious because some suspishion is good in this case.
      You are right that it is overpriced and bad that it is patented and a secret. People ARE these days making similar things from their own electrical components.
      Actually I know that simple copper coils can have great health and energy benefits. There is some deep theory behind it that I personally discovered, but the theory doesnt matter because thousands of people are using this without any deep theories, just personal experimentation. Look into electroculture (using copper coils to help plants grow). What is good for the plants is good for people too.
      This is actually old knowledge that somehow got lost. Amazing...
      Im not saying that the qlink doesn't do more than a simple copper coil... it probably does? Shungite materials are known to help people feel better.
      Im just saying that... it shouldn't be so tightly held onto, as some secret.
      I think I will personally NOT buy this, but I will buy the raw ingrediants to make my own thing HAHHA :) :D
      I don't doubt the usefulness of this video. Its a good video. Being suspcious is useful to an extent. I like the fact that hes digging into the studies and finding that there aren't any. The company seems suspect.
      But heres the thing... imagine a dodgy company does a bunch of tests on your health, then recommends you walk more and do jogging in the forests to improve your health and charges you 1000$ for the information. Seems ridiculous right? Everyone knows this already. Imagine doing that in a world or a place where no one knows that this is good for you...
      Their product can still work despite the company being dodgy.

    • @mariviento
      @mariviento Місяць тому

      It works for me!

  • @cathygoltsoff9615
    @cathygoltsoff9615 2 роки тому +5

    Q-link and frequency - playing music by ear: I have been playing musical instruments since about 6 months into Covid (mostly cello). I read music that I purchase and also Suzuki Cello Books. I am now playing by ear along with most any videos and in any key. I like to play Moon River and Yesterday from the Beatles on my cello. Previously I would hunt down audio that was similar to the music that I had. Now I can play along in several octaves by ear. I can choose a video and play along easily. I recently played an Elvis tune for the 1st time for a visitor. I have always found it easier to read music and maybe play a little by ear, Now I can play most anything by ear. (I like to play along with videos of cellists that I admire. This also extends to my violin playing. I have only recently acquired a talent for playing by ear (easily and I sound good). I have only had my q-link for a couple of months. I purchased it as I am worried about emf’s but now that I have learned about srt and frequency I wonder if it has anything to do with my much improved ability to play music by ear?.

    • @alexforbes7440
      @alexforbes7440 Рік тому +2

      That's very mysterious and interesting. Thanks for sharing

  • @bernadettelinfoot
    @bernadettelinfoot Рік тому

    Thanks for the video, very informative. I believe in energy but this q link was expensive so I'm glad to find your video

  • @powers1217
    @powers1217 3 роки тому +5

    I’m not sure how much they were then, but my mother bought 3 gold ones in the early ‘90s when they first came out 🙄. At least they’re thick gold and I have the gold value in them.

  • @nogoogle6349
    @nogoogle6349 3 роки тому +2

    Nice research video. How about a research video on Xero sandals and their claims on how regular shoes are like a cast on your foot that leads to all the imbalances throughout our entire body. Thanks

  • @susanneschauf7417
    @susanneschauf7417 Рік тому +1

    The only thing I can think of is that induction does something. There is a measurable very slight current flow when you wind a copper wire. If that does people any good, you can DIY that very cheaply.
    It would be interesting to use a multimeter to measure the volt charge of the body with and without the copper coil.

  • @lafarx3334
    @lafarx3334 2 роки тому +14

    Someone muscle tested me with the pendant in my hand and without. My body seemed to get 10 times stronger with the Q link pendant in my hand. I am not a mental person so I was shocked and bought one. Placebo effect does not work on me.

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  2 роки тому +5

      But did you have the strength of ten Grinches, plus two?

    • @joeserianz6205
      @joeserianz6205 2 роки тому +8

      I was muscle tested by my Nutritionist and was much stronger with the Q-Link than without. I was tested holding my cell phone, hand up against an electrical outlet, hand over a laptop, and standing under a ceiling fan all of which give off harmful frequencies to varying degrees.

    • @standardtuning4guitars423
      @standardtuning4guitars423 Рік тому +2

      @@bigtb1717 youre great. you should go into comedy as your talents are wasted here.

    • @mindislife2.084
      @mindislife2.084 5 місяців тому +1

      Same, I was in a Tony Robbins seminar in 2000 in Melbourne, and the seminar was selling Qlink. A lot of us went to get our arm muscle strength tested, holding a phone without Qlink (weak), and then holding phone with Qlink (strong). After I got tested, I observed others being tested. A small Chinese student came to get his arm tested. The large caucasian man tried to push his arm down and it wouldn't easily and the arm bounced back showing that the phone wasnt affecting his strength. Then the caucasion guy said "Strange, why are you testing strong? Do you have a Qlink with you?" And the asian guy admitted, yes he just bought one and its in his pocket!! So the test was genuine

    • @vegiii4868
      @vegiii4868 4 місяці тому

      :Dexactly this test is placebo. It was already tried when person didnt know about it so you sir are pure example of clown.

  • @dancingbear2290
    @dancingbear2290 Рік тому +3

    Thank you for sharing. Copper is a conductor. I like to work with crystals, metals, sands, nature in understanding the vibrations. Copper is always moving, pushing, conducting. That is what they feel, no less, no more. This is a small, very small EMF protection but nothing like they advertise. Silver is stronger.

    • @Dao_Yi
      @Dao_Yi Рік тому

      If test on a dog may eliminate placebo effect. Do you think gold do better than silver on EMF protection?

  • @oriorc
    @oriorc Рік тому +16

    I bealived this video but got one anyway and trust me, if you are affected by negative people or environment (sensitive personality type), you will feel this pendand grounding efect almost instantly. Very positive effect, nothing crazy just like walking in a forest or sea side after stresfull months, just feel more alive and pressent. But if you insensitive or live in a cosy nice place already this pendand might not have any effect as you get enough good energy from your environment already. Just my personal experiense, hope that helps.

  • @enduroebikeaddict
    @enduroebikeaddict 2 роки тому +7

    I believe this coil is a tensor ring, so it could possibly work.
    I used to work in an electronic repair shop and one day, a guy showed up with his young son. The kid was suffering from a kind of severe arthritis disease. The son was wearing a hand made bracelet made of twisted copper wires that had 2 high voltage diodes in the circuit. They brought the bracelet in to have a solder repaired on one diode. The kid that was maybe 5 years old, would not be affected by placebo, swear by the immediate relief he was getting when wearing the bracelet. I think there is a lot of things we don't know about the human energies and have a lot to learn.
    I agree that the Q-link is way overpriced, but hey, if it is in fact a tensor ring, then it might explain why people are saying it works..
    Cheers

    • @enduroebikeaddict
      @enduroebikeaddict 2 роки тому +1

      @@holdenmccann Kids will cry when getting a scratch, yes, but it is not because of a real pain, but rather a way to get attention, and when they do, no need to cry anymore.
      Arthritis however, is caused by real physical conditions, mainly tissues around the joints, so this pain is real. Everything that exist is energies and vibrations/frequencies, pain is also energy, if you can alter its frequencies, then the pain will be altered. Proof of this, some pets will detect when their owner is about to have a seizure and warn them, because they are sensitive and can detect those frequencies.
      I work in the field of natural healing and suggest you do some research on CHI, vibrations, Solfeggio frequencies, Dr Royal Rife, Dr. Emoto’s “The Secret Life of Water” to maybe learn something about all this energy stuff...
      Cheers

    • @IsaiahMolina37
      @IsaiahMolina37 Рік тому +3

      @@enduroebikeaddict I was about to reply to this but you did a great job with those points. People keep throwing around the word placebo without understanding energy, frequency, vibration. 🙌🏽👁️☀️

  • @usinebob
    @usinebob Рік тому

    Thanks for this very useful information. Your investigation was very detailed. There is another company iTeracare with a similar product but seems good. I wish you can do a review on their product…thanks.

  • @notvegan2006
    @notvegan2006 3 роки тому +2

    If this does act as a capacitor then it should be a simple test to determine the change in electrical potential along with the body's charge and current. while wearing the pendant. Instead the company obfuscates and uses blatant deception in their advertising. How much does 25 feet of copper wire cost?

  • @makerleym
    @makerleym 3 роки тому +12

    Thanks for your investment and also your display of openness in your other comments. Do you still have the coil? I would like to know the length and size of it. My take on the item is why not build myself one. First I need a theory of how it works to guide the build: so the coil is going to act as a resonator, it will take time to resonate to the perfect match of your average heart beat. Once it does it will act as a metronome/pacemaker encouraging constance in the whole electrical heart system. The coil being very long will permit many higher harmonics to build up until coherence is achieved. The benefits of a clean and constant heart signal affects many other cells in the body, you'll have to research that part yourselves. Other than the clearer inter-cell electrical communications, good management of charges through the body will be possible and does help against EMF negative effects: mainly with Action Potential and Zeta-potential. BTW I'm motivated to try this as past experiments with orgone placed near the heart does feel as there are electromagnetic interactions with the heart.
    On with the build. It would be best if each person's best heart beat sequence would be known, but otherwise we can speculate the perfect length of the coil. In my case, when I use heart coherence apps I relaxe into a typical cycle of 60BPM*, 1 heart beat a second, what a coincidence, well I think not! Another theory of mine is that the second is exactly what it is originating from many people realizing hearts prefer the 1 second cycle (I know about the Mesopotamian base 60 thing with it's relation to 1,2,3,4,5,6 and the 12 phalanges but I prefer to think further about the second with relation to the heart as it's more inspiring). I like the 1 second thing because it gives more relevance to the 432hz paradigme. Far fetch... Maybe... Still my guitar sounds in tune with the fridge when tuned to 432hz. So electricity does this on its own, considering that the earth is at a constant size and the surface has free electron our biology basically evolved on top of an electrically oscillating bell. Our body is build to sing that song, not the Shumann one.
    Continuing with the coil, so I will pick a heart beat of one second to calculate the length of coper wire for a whole oscillation or a fraction of complete cycle (using the speed of electric current in coper at body temperature as the pendant would rest on the chest), OR I just use the megalithic yard as the length (or multiple of). For parts I will use thin inductor wire.
    Comments are welcome as this is an open source project herby declared.
    *Edit: 60Hz to 60BPM.

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  3 роки тому +6

      60 Hz would be 60 per second, not one per second. A coil of wire that is connected to nothing and is outside the body cannot resonate with your heart or affect the pace of your heart. That's not how electrical frequencies work. Frankly, I wouldn't want a device to try and force my heart to a specific frequency. An actual pacemaker has a battery and a sensor and only takes action to prevent dangerous arrhythmia. It doesn't try to keep the heart at one, specific rate. Plus those have a battery and a computer chip and have sensors and electrodes connected to the heart. And even they have only a limited capacity to affect your heart rhythm. A coil of wire outside the body won't affect your heart rate. And that's good. I wouldn't want my heart rate to match itself to everything I get near that happens to "resonate" at a different rate than my heart. I work on all types of electrical and electronic equipment, including enormous transformers, inductors, coils, capacitors, etc. I sometimes spend hours a day right next to this type of equipment. If there was any way for a coil of wire or other outside electrical or magnetic field to change my heart rate to it's specific resonant frequency, my heart rate would be changing drastically all the time.
      As to the coil in the Q-link I cut open: I tried to get it to get it to unwind, but it is too fine of wire and it is too fully molded into the plastic. All I could do is break it apart, but couldn't get the strands to unwind at all.

    • @makerleym
      @makerleym 3 роки тому +6

      ​@@bigtb1717 (correction: 60 BPM = 1Hz) I was thinking that the coil would act as a dipole antenna where electrons where only displaced inside the coil, not going outside the open circuit the electrons would then return to an even dispersion. Since there is a following heart beat and low resistance in the copper coil, there is already movements and charge displacement in the coil when another electromagnetic impulse affects the charges. My belief is that after a few weeks, the urban environment's chaotic signals doesn't sustain clear harmonics in the coil but the full range of the wearer's modulating heart patterns build up to a constant resonating signal. After that part how and why your heart would sync up or be affected by the pendant is not clear. I like the ideas presented in this [www.heartmath.org/research/science-of-the-heart/energetic-communication/] while if we really want to consider every aspect in detail we could start here [www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4179748/].
      I agree that changing the heart patterns sounds not that good, while naturally we operate at different modular heart BPMs (I say modular as there must be optimal rhythms where the passing and end points of the rates would be something the heart would know to be efficient for itself) of course constantly alternating with breathing patterns.
      I found a study showing heart rates being influence by high voltage: The Effect of the Electromagnetic Radiation from High Voltage Transformers on Students Health in Hebron District. Comparing with the typical electrical environment of small scale circuits, urban signals, dirty electricity, etc. the effects on the rate of the heart wouldn't be that detrimental and neither inducing drastic changes to the heart rates. Maybe interfering with the heart's ability to configure itself to the optimal patterns though. On the other hand such a pendant could facilitate and stabilize the wearer's modular heart rates (similar to a signer tuning is voice to the instruments) thus having a positive impact on the rest of the body's functions. That is the theory I guess. I will have to follow up on the sources of my first link showing cases of people (and with animals) having their heart rates reach coherent states.
      Thanks for the reply, it might be best you don't have any more aspect of the device to share with me as this is not an attempt to reverse engineer the device, let's just say I was inspired by what was presented.

    • @Trojanmachine69
      @Trojanmachine69 3 роки тому +2

      @@makerleym bravo 👏

    • @deannatroy8113
      @deannatroy8113 3 роки тому +1

      I heard the wire is 150m long

    • @MaximumEfficiency
      @MaximumEfficiency 3 роки тому +1

      interesting idea

  • @russellm7530
    @russellm7530 Рік тому +1

    Maybe one of those cheap copper magnetic bracelets would be worth a try.
    Ive heard some pretty amazing claims about qlink here on UA-cam by different people and even electronics technician types say q link seemed to benefit them but apparently this thing is expensive.
    So maybe I'll try a copper bracelet or something else first.
    Thanks for the review.

  • @RowenaPortch
    @RowenaPortch Рік тому +9

    Thanks for doing this research. I am not for or against this product, however, I have seen the benefits on my husband. He suffers from chronic nose bleeds. He does not believe in any of this stuff, but when I asked him to wear the q-link pendant a friend had given us, his nose bleeds stopped. This happened on multiple occasions. Was it a placebo effect? Who knows? The disk in the center could have been titanium dust with carbon mixed in. Without analyzing it, there is no way to know. Because the human body is energetic by nature, a power source is unnecessary. There are Sungite stones that perform the same thing these pendants do for a fraction of the cost. Personally, I would rather take a barefoot walk in nature for natural healing effects. It is free.

  • @dnsps
    @dnsps 3 роки тому +3

    Thanks for your investigation on this. I saw this years ago. It didn’t make sense then either. They are selling the “Placebo Effect”. Better to get a good night’s sleep.

  • @realsuperdoctor5260
    @realsuperdoctor5260 2 роки тому +2

    you could wear a bit of copper around your neck it will do the same thing, if you put a neodymium magnet down a copper tube it will slow down by the field the magnet is putting out, copper is an EMF shield so it is right in a way.

  • @uday99
    @uday99 2 роки тому

    what next to take down such scammer? Even i tried to check using EMF meter app and there is no change of reading

  • @elwood212
    @elwood212 2 роки тому +12

    What you may of uncovered could be orgonite power ground and set into a separate disc of epoxy set inside a copper wire that can change the frequencies between electrical devices and our bodies.

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  2 роки тому +8

      Again with the "maybe this..." or "but what if this..." Speculation is fine, but it's not proof, it's not evidence and it's not even really an argument. It's literally just a "what if." And that's still totally fine. So let's talk about it.
      Other people have suggested "orgonite" could be in the disk. I have lots of questions. What is orgonite powder? What is orgonite? What would it do? Nothing about an isolated, insulated, copper wire set in some plastic could change the frequencies between any electrical device and our bodies. Do you have a mechanism by which orgonite could supposedly be doing this or any way it could be tested or verified?
      Also, do you know that the guy who originally made up the term "Orgone" didn't actually create a special orgonite material? As far as I can tell, the guy who invented the terms "orgone" and "orgonite" didn't talk about any special material or element or anything that could be "powdered." He He created "orgonite chambers" that were supposed to help you achieve the perfect orgasm and to harness and channel the "orgone energy" created by a perfect orgasm. It was all about orgasm energy, which he called orgone. Most of his research involved achieving the "perfect orgasm" in order to create enough of this energy to not only heal, but also to use that energy to combat the aliens he believed were invading the Earth. He literally fled at least one, maybe two countries because he was being investigated as a possible pimp and/or for running what was suspected to be a sex club/brothel. So clearly, sex was the focus of his "research." By the time he made his way to the US he was making money to fund his research by selling his "chambers" to the rich and famous.
      It's only the modern alternative medicine crowd who seems to have heard the terms "orgonite" and "orgone energy" and heard that they come from some German doctor from 50-100 years ago who supposedly discovered some new form of energy and they simply co-opted the words. But now they say that little pyramids of resin with pretty swirls of metal and glitter inside are "orgonite" and that they have some sort of healing property or EMF blocking property. Based on what, exactly? And now you apparently believe that it's possible to have "powered orgonite." So, what is "orgonite," what are its properties and what exactly can it do? And can it be tested in any way?

  • @taniapankratova354
    @taniapankratova354 5 місяців тому +2

    I was so desperate with my health issues like severe anxiety, panic attacks, insomnia, anemia and exhaustion, that I went ahead and purchased the Q link pendant 7 months ago. After wearing it all that time and never removing it, all my symptoms haven’t improved. In fact, to be honest with you, my health issues badly degenerated since then. So today I have finally removed my Q link pendant because other than the annoyance of having to wear it day and night, I didn’t feel any improvement in my health condition whatsoever.

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  5 місяців тому +1

      I'm sorry to hear about your health struggles. I hope you are able to find something that does help.

    • @OpenUp.
      @OpenUp. Місяць тому

      My heart ❤️ goes out to you. Please don't only search for physical products. I know you have probably tried a lot, being in your situation I wouldn't doubt that this recommendation might even seem mindless or apathetic but please get back in any way to anything natural. Whatever it is. Food, cloths, environments, music. Anything from nature has one thing in common, they all know to naturally align and therefore heal and dissolve blockages. As anything with nature also, it takes a certain process like a plant growing, which doesn't happen in an instant but undergoes the much needed foundation that is set. I don't want to lecture you, heck I don't know anything really about this world but I just want to help, as I know that feeling in and out😊take care

  • @KXSocialChannel
    @KXSocialChannel 3 роки тому +3

    26:50 Just to correct you there... people are more likely to believe that something works if it is more expensive. Same as the placebo effect regarding the size of the pill. I.e. larger sugar pills are more likely to work.

    • @MaryFilkins
      @MaryFilkins Рік тому

      Correct. Also, if there's a rose gold option, you also pay more... because it's prettier

  • @stran1239
    @stran1239 Рік тому

    Hi, could you please share lawsuit/statement about Robert Young, that you show at 13min 36sec? (or any information about this lawsuit would be helpful). Or how can I find Youngs's statement you showed? Thank you

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  Рік тому +1

      Not sure if UA-cam will let the links remain, but I'll try.
      centerforinquiry.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/33/quackwatch/young_plea.pdf
      That is the court document I showed in the video.
      Here is an LA Times article about one lawsuit. If you search his name you can find other articles about this lawsuit as well as other charges and lawsuits, including apparently new felony charges in 2022.
      www.latimes.com/la-me-ln-san-diego-ph-miracle-lawsuit-20181102-story.html

  • @SevScout
    @SevScout Рік тому

    For some reason, none of the electrical circuits I build ever functions as intended, not even when I follow instructions to a T. Perhaps I need to believe harder.

  • @martinwilliams9866
    @martinwilliams9866 3 місяці тому

    Does the coil have two loose ends, or is it one continuous loop of wire?

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  3 місяці тому

      I believe it just has two "loose" ends, but it was very difficult to tell. The wire is very fine and is completely encased in plastic. I tried cutting it out of the plastic in an attempt to unwind it and such, but the copper came apart in chunks because it's basically just glued into a solid clump.

  • @beyazlamor5591
    @beyazlamor5591 Рік тому +1

    I respect your claims and investigation. But besides all the discussions about Qlink, I have just one question:
    In their official website, they say; "Q-link MAY BE RETURNED FOR ANY REASON, for a full refund within 90 days of purchase". That's the money back guarantee they give their clients. So isn't this a fair deal? Who would give 90 days money back guarantee if it was a scam, since 1991? You can feel it or not feel it within a couple of weeks, right? So anyone can return the Qlink and take a refund if they think that it doesn't work... Right?

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  Рік тому

      Sure. People could return if they decide they don't want it. Granted, I didn't try this so I don't know what would be involved, who I would have to contact or anything like that. Maybe someone could actually get a refund, maybe it would be a massive hassle. Most of the people who would buy something like this really want it to work and can probably convince themselves that it does, whether it does or not, especially with the amount of vague claims it makes. It's difficult to know if it is or isn't working, and considering the variety of the claimed affects and vagueness in many cases, it's easy to find something and convince yourself it's from a product like this if you are looking hard enough. So even though it doesn't actually do anything, I imagine they don't get all that many returns.
      When I call it a scam, what I mean is that they are making claims about scientific evidence and testing that are simply not true. At least one of the studies they tout is a definite, fraudulent fabrication. Plus, everything about the company is absolutely classic, standard snake-oil type marketing. Make vague, non-specific, non-testable, non-falsifiable claims based on a bunch of flowery words that initially sound like something but are nothing, then start pushing the anecdotal testimonials hard. And when I confirmed that it's a piece of plastic with a coil of wire that connects to nothing and goes nowhere, it became clear that it absolutely could not be doing anything. Not to mention the fact that they are extremely careful to not say what it actually does, because that would be a claim people could test and refute.
      So sure. People could probably request their money back and they might even get it. But that doesn't mean the product does anything and it doesn't mean their claimed studies aren't totally bogus, to the point of being shameful.

    • @beyazlamor5591
      @beyazlamor5591 Рік тому +1

      ​@@bigtb1717 So yu say: "MAYBE someone could actually get a refund, MAYBE it would be a massive hassle...". Isn't that only a personal assumption of yours? And you say that you IMAGINE they don't get all that many returns. So apparently, that is also about your personal "imagination". Not a fact. Yaou also say "People could PROBABLY request their money back and they MIGHT even get it." So you're talking about probabilities about my question, but your claims are worded as if they are facts, not probabilities. If we are talking about facts, I believe you shouldn't say "MAYBE" or "I IMAGINE"... The rest you mentioned in your answer is just a repetition of what you already claim in your video, rather than my actual question. All other replies you gave here are also about your claims, so you repeated your claims rather than answering my actual question. Sorry but I think your answer to my question is irrelevant. My question was not about why you think it was a scam. Peace.

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  Рік тому

      Your main question was: "Who would give a money back guarantee if it was a scam?"
      I answered that question as I see it: Snake oil salesman. That's the answer of who would do that (A scene from the movie Tommy Boy comes to mind, though that wasn't so much about snake oil products, just junk ones). The Q-link is marketed and the claims are structured such that it's extremely difficult to know if it's working and the type of people who buy it really want it to work. It's easy for people to believe it does something, even if it doesn't. It's also possible that the person actually does feel something due to the placebo effect. That's why they can offer a money back guarantee, even if it doesn't work. Plus people are busy and sometimes lazy. Even some of the worst products on internet ads and late-night TV ads offer money back guarantees. That doesn't mean they work or are worth the money, but a lot of people simply won't go through the effort of returning the product. And even saying "for any reason" is calculated. If they said "Try it for 90 days and if it doesn't help you, we'll give you your money back" that would put a hard expectation of 90 days on results and could plant the seed of doubt and skepticism in people's minds. "Hey, does that mean it doesn't work for everyone and might not work for me?"
      As to the question of "You can feel it or not within a couple weeks, right?" I don't know that, do you? I've had commenters in here tell people they have to wear it longer to feel any effects. Is there a hard claim by Q-link to this effect? And when I say "hard claim" I mean, does Q-Link say that you definitely will either feel the effects or not within a couple weeks? Saying "many people feel better within two weeks" or something like that leaves a massive gap open for people to interpret their lack of results as meaning they are one of the people who just have to wait longer.
      Obviously I don't have access to their return records so I can only speculate, which is why I said I "imagine" they don't get very many returns. This is only a guess based on the above, plus my experience with family and friends in my life buying products like this. These types of products are often abandoned because they don't work. But it's only after months or even years of trying. At least in the case of the Q-link pendant it's not hurting them and isn't a recurring cost, so there's no harm in just continuing to wear it, even if they've since moved on to the next product that is supposed to fix everything.
      As for my assumptions about actually getting your money back: Like I said, I didn't try to get my money back. I cut one of mine apart, so I didn't send it back. I cannot speak with authority on whether or not someone definitely would get their money back if they tried. They do say you can on their website if you contact them and "request" return authorization. But they also make false claims about studies on their website. So yes, I said maybe you could get your money back and maybe it would be a hassle. And hey, maybe it would be a smooth process with no issues. I can't say for sure. I didn't try.
      I'm sorry if anything I said felt evasive or anything. I am seriously trying to answer the questions the way I honestly feel and to the best of my ability given the information I have access to. Cheers.

    • @beyazlamor5591
      @beyazlamor5591 Рік тому

      @@bigtb1717 You just make "assumptions". So I "assume" that you have an obsessive compulsive personality because you write and write and write and write hundreds of words but keep saying the same things over and over again. Calm down man. There were 4 question marks in my message, but you prefered to pick one among them (the irrelevant one of course) and answered only that one with your assumptions. That was not my "main" question (as you claim). And you did not take the whole sentence of that question you picked which you claimed that it was my main question. If you cut the word "...since 1991" form my sentence, the context of my question completely changes. And that was your intention obviously. You're even manipulating my question to fit in the answer you want to give. Things don't work with "maybe"s and assumptions man. You think you have the right to "assume" things in your sentences but don't let anybody else to "assume" that these people are not scammers. Scammers can't survive over 30 years in business if they are scamming. You assume that they are scammers even though there is a moneyback guarantee. You assume that nobody returns the product because they don't want hassle... You assume this and that all the time. And of course you can not return your product back because you messed it up man. You broke the thing in peaces and you say you didn't want hassle and that's why you didn't request a refund? Come on... Done with your assumptions so no need to discuss further. There are many points to reply on your loooooooooong repetitive claims but I don't feel like I should reply each and every sentence of your message because you're so obsessed with your claims that you don't really listen. You just want to repeat your claims with a variety of different sentences. I'm sorry too, if anything I said felt evasive or anything, but unless you're a scientist and did double blind research about your claims, all your sentences are only your assumtions and "maybe" claims. So take care... bye..

  • @rodriguezdji
    @rodriguezdji 2 роки тому +19

    Very interesting review. I have used this product in the past and noticed it actually reduced dramatically the impact of EMF in my body, for example I noticed a lot less static charge when wearing polyester clothing also reduced the tension in my right hand from using all day the computer mouse; although I came to the same conclusion you did that it's only a coil of copper wire, I think that coil of copper wire does something to help the body reduce the impact of EMF but as you said it will not be as profitable it they just say we sell coils of copper wire for 100 bucks to make you feel better. I when further to experiment if a copper bracelet or necklace will have the same effect and it kind of does except that pure copper gets oxidation easily and has to be constantly cleaned and having it in coils does more resonance as a electrical transformer with copper coils around magnets. I guess they just charge 100 times more for copper coil that you don't have to wind and clean. God bless!

    • @matthewnelson3587
      @matthewnelson3587 2 роки тому +5

      Another Shell account that can be linked to several other videos of these scam youtube marketers.

  • @joeizdaman4290
    @joeizdaman4290 Рік тому +9

    Thanks for your based review, i bought it n it really works. I used to get sudden prickly itching for the past 3-4 yeaes n never found out what caused it n now it's gone after wearin the pendant. Thanks for being based, it convinced me to try it.

  • @maryrenaud6732
    @maryrenaud6732 2 роки тому +9

    Thanks, I heard Dr Robert O Malone tout this in another video about vaccine detoxing, as he wears one himself for EMF protection (he was not selling it or reviewing it, merely stating he believes in it and wears one).

    • @Aaron-se1qw
      @Aaron-se1qw 2 роки тому +4

      Yes, saw that interview so got me interested, thats what bought me here..As EMF is a very real thing..
      Altho now kinda now throws some doubt on the info of his jab detox protocol he was touting no matter how true and proven it may be.. 🤔

    • @BrentWalker999
      @BrentWalker999 2 роки тому

      @@Aaron-se1qw detox is a myth

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  2 роки тому +2

      @@Aaron-se1qw Regardless of your thoughts on whether EMF at the levels we are currently exposed to are dangerous, the Q-Link can do nothing to protect you from them. At best, it slightly reduces the EMF level that it directly, physically blocks. In other words, you may have SLIGHTLY less EMF exposure in the 1 square inch area of your body it physically covers, but absolutely zero change anywhere else. And it isn't even particularly good at blocking EMF in that 1 square inch area because it is mostly plastic. Things that are better (as tested by an EMF meter) included my keys, a few coins, my own hand and even my pocket knife.

    • @hamishanderson6738
      @hamishanderson6738 2 роки тому

      @@BrentWalker999 stupid statement.

  • @jeeves3600
    @jeeves3600 3 роки тому +24

    Referencing the term, " placebo effect ", we might all be surprised at the results pharmaceutical companies get from clinical trials on prescription and nonprecription medicine. Probably much evidence they all work mostly on placebo. Great video, btw.

    • @terkelalgevind529
      @terkelalgevind529 2 роки тому +3

      Indeed. If the pendants and magic crystals dont actually work scientifically but works because the wearer will it to work, who cares how it work if something works it works and haters gonna hate.
      xD

    • @detodosmoles
      @detodosmoles 2 роки тому

      Pharmaceutical drug trials involve testing the placebo vs real drug to see how the effects compare. They're also double -blinded, meaning neither the doctor, nor the patient, know whether they're being given placebo or actual drug. You should look into it more so that you don't speak out of the same ignorance the Q-Link protection amulet lovers are.

    • @jek__
      @jek__ Рік тому +3

      @@terkelalgevind529 It seems like it would be more helpful to teach people that they can feel better with just the power of their own focus than the continue to parasitize them by selling them product to do what they can get for free, but such lessons cant be as easily monetized

  • @user-ie7ox5jt9g
    @user-ie7ox5jt9g Рік тому

    I knew it so I didn't buy it but I wondered that what is in it? So I come here to check it out and the result is as expected

  • @cameronmorrisdrums
    @cameronmorrisdrums 2 роки тому +1

    Interesting video bro… I appreciate your research. I bought one of these awhile back. You’re also very measured and wise. I appreciate your discernment.

  • @andyrapkin8978
    @andyrapkin8978 3 роки тому +1

    nice investigative work !

  • @piscesmoonrising1450
    @piscesmoonrising1450 Рік тому +2

    Thank you for this video! I am someone who believes in all this kind of stuff, including health benefits of copper, but after seeing this video, I dont think this product is worth the money (and thanks to your testing and research) might not be legit. There are plenty of other copper/crystal/ Schumann Resonance products out there for cheaper and more effective. To answer the question about how long the copper coil is supposed to be, its supposedly 150ft. Not sure that changes anything, but I like the idea of information so people can do their own tests like this gentleman to help others know if something is worth it or not. People still have the free will to do what they want with that info. Thank you for saving me money (this time lol). 💜🙏

    • @Alusnovalotus
      @Alusnovalotus Рік тому

      Can you list some of the better products please?

    • @smr-goll3877
      @smr-goll3877 Рік тому

      Since you are Into all this, what do you think about shungite? Its saut to have Kind of the Same effects.

  • @SW-zx3op
    @SW-zx3op 2 роки тому +3

    Thanks for the teardown, its greatly appreciated. Are there any genuine products out there for people that have EMF sensitivity? If I spend an hour or more around electronics I start to feel ill (nausea, fatigue, brain fog, migraine) . I've tried earthing mats, copper bracelets, power plug filters (that supposedly 'cleans' the electricity) none seem to work.
    I can't really avoid electronics as it integral to my work, any genuine suggestions would be appreciated.

    • @annonymous9063
      @annonymous9063 2 роки тому +4

      Don't ask him! He doesn't believe in EMF sensitivity. It's all just hype, in his words.

    • @BrentWalker999
      @BrentWalker999 2 роки тому +2

      Emf sensisity is not a thing

    • @maloneandsloan2137
      @maloneandsloan2137 2 роки тому +7

      @@annonymous9063 I would never trust anyone who doesn’t believe in it. I have it and it IS real.

    • @MzClementine
      @MzClementine 2 роки тому

      @@BrentWalker999 yes it is you ignorant fool.

    • @MzClementine
      @MzClementine 2 роки тому +3

      @S W if you're being for real there is clothing you can buy. I wouldn't trust any of these gadget things. The clothing yeah. You can actually buy the cloth.

  • @beau5977
    @beau5977 Рік тому +1

    I think you just mix some little crystal dust powder with resins. The gray stuff is that . And the copper wire help the energies. Maybe is that by watching how they make orgone pendant and pyramid!

  • @Bearddis
    @Bearddis 3 роки тому +3

    The funny thing about things like this is, they would probably sell many more and make more money if they sold it for 10 dollars.

    • @taltosalmos7067
      @taltosalmos7067 3 роки тому

      Placebo effect wouldn't work. Who would believe in a cheap plastic for $9.99?
      People are trying to ridicule placebo effect on the human mind when it's the strongest natural healing process. So is fate.
      Q-Link is working because 90% of the people who are buying it believe in it's healing force. So did I until I saw this video. Now I have to find something else on Amazon LOL.

    • @janinawalker4200
      @janinawalker4200 3 роки тому

      @@taltosalmos7067 Hey great point. Luckily I wasn't going to get it as the deadline has already passed and I would not spend that much, but I felt this was interesting. I will be getting a book about EMFs that will cost me less than $26 and that should be interesting to read as I do sit close to computers for the last 40 years.

    • @taltosalmos7067
      @taltosalmos7067 3 роки тому +1

      ​@@janinawalker4200 One thing is for sure EMF blockers are all scam. /watch?v=wkReOA2nBn0
      If after 40 years you are still alive than this EMF thing might not be as bad as people think. But then again it's completely life style dependent. { stress management, regular exercise, eating unprocessed whole foods}

  • @seawolf7140
    @seawolf7140 2 роки тому +7

    I wonder if that "epoxy" wafer contains a mixture of materials that helps this device function? Probably not easy to do, but there may be a way to analyze its contents.

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  2 роки тому +4

      Just some honest questions: What "mixture of materials" could possible allow a tiny disk to do any of the things this company claims? Whatever it is, it's still totally isolated from your body by plastic and not connected to the copper ring in any way.
      No matter what was found inside that disk from a microscopic analysis, chemical analysis, spectroscopic analysis, etc., what would any of that prove? What materials or elements should be looked for? What are the specific claims for those elements? The problem is that without specific claims, anything we find will just lead to more "well, maybe that element is doing something."
      At this point there have been loads of comments along the same lines of "well, but what if..." Okay, yeah, what if? What if it was magnetic? What if it was radioactive? What if it was kinda like a capacitor? What if it was kinda like an inductor (All those have been asked)? What if the disk was...what if...what if? How about this: What if it's just nothing? What if it's just a ploy by a company to sell stuff? The company has used blatantly stolen data to fake studies and made huge lists of supposed studies which they don't link to and nobody can seem to find. So maybe it works on some as-yet-undiscovered principal of physics and electricity. Maybe it works on some mystical property of a mystery element in the little disk. Or, maybe it's nothing but a product sold by a company using virtually the exact same tactics that have sold snake-oil products for centuries.

    • @DivineVortex
      @DivineVortex 2 роки тому +1

      It does I used a meter to test mine and it absolutely works. He didn’t even test it on the camera probably cuz he knows it works. He is an idiot

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  2 роки тому +4

      What "meter" did you use for your testing? What did you test? What units? In what way did the Q-Link "work?" From your other comment I assume you tested "EMF" and believe the Q-Link blocks EMF in some way. What was your testing methodology?

    • @DaniiMarie333
      @DaniiMarie333 2 роки тому +3

      Oregon energy is made using crystal and metal particulate into epoxy that naturally squeezes pressurizes as it hardens and forms. Copper wire is the other component usually wrapped in a spiral of sort. All the Oregon devices I've seen and made follow those basics.......

    • @hamishanderson6738
      @hamishanderson6738 2 роки тому +1

      ​@@DaniiMarie333 You're right, but
      it's 'Orgone'

  • @verumdoctrina4215
    @verumdoctrina4215 Рік тому +5

    After doing multiple tests and using a multi frequency emf reader, the pendant actually deflects all emf surrounding the pendant. Why didn't you take the wound copper out? Confirmation bias? Do Antennas absorb any frequencies? Hmm.. I wonder?

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  Рік тому +3

      I did try to remove the coil. It is completely molded into clear plastic and it breaks apart in clumps with the plastic. It can't really be removed.
      Well, antennas don't technically "absorb frequencies." That may be a very simplistic way of explaining antennas, but frequency is just a measure of a rate of something over time. But sure, antennas can absorb a small amount of EMF/RF energy, and based on their specific tuning, may be more efficient at absorbing some frequencies of RF/EMF energy over some others. Basically, almost any object can absorb some EMF/RF energy. An antenna is just a device designed to be good at absorbing a specific energy type at specific energy levels and within specific frequency ranges or "bands." But an antenna can only absorb whatever amount of energy physically hits their surface, and typically not even all of that. Some will be reflected or even re-emitted. They can't "draw in" energy from anywhere or "block" energy from anywhere else. They can only absorb what reaches their surface. Also, antennas need to be connected to something in order for the energy absorbed to actually do anything. Otherwise it will just get converted to a tiny amount of heat. Are you saying the tiny coil of wire in the Q-Link works like an antenna? Then what?
      If you performed testing that demonstrated the Q-Link can do anything more than block a little bit of EMF/RF energy from reaching the detector on an EMF/RF meter when held in front of it (which just about any small object made of metal or with metal in it will also do), I'd love to see it. In fact, the entire scientific world would love to see it. Please share the actual data/units from your testing as well as your testing methodology and an explanation of how you controlled for variables as well as show your control testing which demonstrates that the Q-Link is somehow special and unique in providing the results you achieved. Just to be sure that a set of keys, a pocket knife or any number of small, metal objects couldn't have achieved the same "results."
      Ultimately, there's a reason a professional anechoic chamber isn't just a tiny coil of copper. It's an elaborate structure of massive, specifically designed and shaped panels, and even then it's difficult to get 100% absorption/blockage of EMF/RF. If a tiny coil of wire in some plastic could do anything meaningful in the way of actually blocking and/or absorbing the EMF/RF energy in a space, it would be an absolutely MASSIVE discovery. It would be a discovery of Nobel prize winning levels. It would be an industry changing, understanding-shattering discovery. So again, if you have testing that shows this, write it up and submit it for publishing. You'll surely become famous. But be prepared for people to scrutinize your results and even try to replicate them to verify they are accurate though.

  • @louisedenman5966
    @louisedenman5966 2 роки тому +5

    Tbh i believe in science, but i also believe that there are things out there we dont know about. I have tried 3 q link pendants (i kept losing them) but they all did give me more energy and make me confident to the point that i started to abuse people through arrogance, before them i suffered from crippling anxiety, they made me lot calmer at times. I also started getting demonic vivid dreams and witch initiation dreams (as well as lots of eating dreams), when i lost a pendant the dreams stopped until i brought another one. The questions you asked are excellent and i too had the same questions, eg which 'frequencies' does it use, and how does it know a frequency is good or bad and which one to resonate with? doesn't make sense at all. However i do think it works and isn't just placebo but it uses devils. I could be wrong, but that's my own opinion based on the knowledge of science, the occult and my own personal experiences.

    • @BrentWalker999
      @BrentWalker999 2 роки тому

      The occult doesn't exist...

    • @hamishanderson6738
      @hamishanderson6738 2 роки тому +3

      @@BrentWalker999 Quantum physics does.

    • @BrentWalker999
      @BrentWalker999 2 роки тому

      @@hamishanderson6738 which has nothing to do with this...

    • @hamishanderson6738
      @hamishanderson6738 2 роки тому +3

      @@BrentWalker999 how do you know?

    • @BrentWalker999
      @BrentWalker999 2 роки тому

      @@hamishanderson6738 cause that not how anything works. A useless piece of plastic has nothing to do with quantum woo

  • @notvegan2006
    @notvegan2006 3 роки тому +1

    Is it possible to pull out the copper wire to see how much wire is in there. Copper is purported to have beneficial effects on water although I don't know if there are scientific studies. Great review.

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  3 роки тому

      It turns out the coil is actually encased in a totally separate piece of plastic. I pulled it further apart and tried to get the copper to unwind, but the individual strands are super fine, and oddly inconsistent in thickness. They were too stuck together from being molded into the plastic. It mostly came apart in chunks. Totally impossible to unwind.

  • @pfields518
    @pfields518 2 роки тому +47

    I bought this for my husband after going to a seminar and seeing a speaker/ trainer wear the product. I asked about it and he stated its really helped his energy levels. Since fathers day 2021 Ive noticed a huge difference in my husbands overall energy and stamina levels. It doesnt work instantly, you have to wear it several weeks before you can see results, but his changes have been so significant I bought myself one because I’ve honestly been jealous how well its working…. So say what what you want. Ive seen proof in a 56 year old man with a heart condition, who didnt have any idea what the product was, he didnt go to the seminar I went to, he just wears it because his wife bought it for him.

    • @BrentWalker999
      @BrentWalker999 2 роки тому +7

      Bot

    • @pfields518
      @pfields518 2 роки тому +2

      @@BrentWalker999 I’m not a bot! Because I have personally seen value in it, Ive got to be fake? Seriously, douche much?

    • @yoloswag4205
      @yoloswag4205 2 роки тому +8

      This guy did a 30 minute analysis explaining the nonexistent science/testing behind the product and opening it up to show it is a glorified piece of plastic with a wire in it. Your counter is, "No it works because some good things have happened while I was wearing it." BY that definition any necklace can be a mystic vibration medallion.

    • @pfields518
      @pfields518 2 роки тому +6

      @@yoloswag4205 and you have never used it so you wouldnt know…. Your point is invalid to me.

    • @louisedenman5966
      @louisedenman5966 2 роки тому +2

      does your husband experience demonic vivid dreams by any chance?

  • @SwissBytesOriginal
    @SwissBytesOriginal 2 роки тому +2

    I opened mine and found exactly the same, I think they rely on their high prices preventing people opening one...

    • @WereAlreadyHere
      @WereAlreadyHere 2 роки тому +1

      They say right on the website that it is an epoxy wafer wrapped in 70 feet of fine copper coil.. You didnt need to open it to figure that out.

    • @SwissBytesOriginal
      @SwissBytesOriginal 2 роки тому +1

      @@WereAlreadyHere When I opened mine it claimed there was a resonating cell inside, they've since changed the wording. Plus they are snake oil junk so it was a pleasure destroying it. 😅

    • @WereAlreadyHere
      @WereAlreadyHere 2 роки тому +2

      @@SwissBytesOriginal Yes the "resonating cell" is an epoxy wafer because the q-link is based on Wilhelm Reich's work suggesting organic epoxy resin amplifies the piezoelectric field of a conductive metal. Was just saying they are pretty straight forward about what it is. Kinda on you if you spent 100$ on it then got pissed that you received exactly what was described.

    • @SwissBytesOriginal
      @SwissBytesOriginal 2 роки тому

      @@WereAlreadyHere Straight forward would be calling it glue, not a resonating cell... You do realise that pseudoscience isn't actually science? Yes fool me once, they'll go the same was as power balance sooner or later...

    • @WereAlreadyHere
      @WereAlreadyHere 2 роки тому

      @@SwissBytesOriginal Straight forward would be calling it 70 feet of fine copper wire coiled around an epoxy resin wafer, which is what they describe it as.
      Wilhelm Reich was 1000x the scientist you will ever be. Did you work extensively with Nicola Tesla? If you do not understand his work, do not believe it to be real science, then you don't exactly have any business buying products based on his theories and any disappointment you experienced doing so is a result of your own ignorance and irresponsible purchasing habits.

  • @crapsterface
    @crapsterface 3 роки тому

    how much weight in copper ?

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  3 роки тому

      Rough estimate, probably a few grams.

  • @VistarCreative
    @VistarCreative 3 роки тому +5

    “It Ain’t What You Don’t Know That Gets You Into Trouble. It’s What You Know for Sure That Just Ain’t So”
    Dude, you just spent what appeared to be about 20 or 30 minutes digging out the epoxy disc which is nothing more than the background for the white logo on the pendant. It’s called branding. Do you realize that the most renowned scientist in the world still don’t know exactly how the brain works? Just because you don’t understand it doesn’t mean it doesn’t work. As you were sir. Press on.

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  3 роки тому +2

      I absolutely admit that there is a lot I don't know. The problem is that this company is making a bunch of claims based on nothing. Q-link is claiming that the core of this thing is "Sympathetic Resonance Technology" that is supposed to be based on a bunch of proven science. Well, the core of this thing is nothing and I researched all the scientific claims and found them to be based on misleading claims at best, and outright lies at worst. They aren't claiming that it "works and we have no idea how." They are claiming it is science based, proven technology. And that's simply false.

    • @TwoFoot
      @TwoFoot 3 роки тому

      lol can't believe people are this stupid

    • @BeardedWorm
      @BeardedWorm 3 роки тому

      That saying works both ways.

  • @agentjay4494
    @agentjay4494 2 роки тому +1

    Why not just run an EMF test with the device? to prove its not effective?

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  2 роки тому +1

      I have done since I made this video. It does nothing more to block EMF than any other small piece of metal and plastic. In fact, just about any metal object I carry in my pockets does more. My keys, my pocket knife and a handful of change each does more than the Q-Link.
      Also, blocking or protecting from EMF isn't even what Q-link claims on their website. At least, it wasn't when I made this video. That seems to primarily be a completely invented claim of others.

  • @donnaschow613
    @donnaschow613 Рік тому +2

    I pray that he never finds out that he is wrong.
    It works similarly to grounding. You can measure the physical effects while wearing it. Test how the body resonates, how the product resonates, and the effects on the mean resonate when exposed to 5G. Test how the body reacts to all different factors .Just a suggestion.

  • @EagleArrow
    @EagleArrow Рік тому +5

    Thank you for doing this video.
    It is the copper that might be helping with emf. They just made it look cool like a Star Trek necklace.
    (My Dad kept a pocket full of copper pennies in his pocket to use as a natural hand sanitizer. Old buildings have copper railings, copper pipes =water sanitizer.)

  • @mataji33
    @mataji33 Рік тому +15

    I have been using this product since the 1990s and found this product very calming. I was told then it changes frequencies by reactive inductance. As a person sensitive to electrical fields this a good solution.

    • @Subaru69420
      @Subaru69420 Рік тому +1

      What is reactive inductance?

    • @richy7tube
      @richy7tube 11 місяців тому

      Is there an off product that I would be cheaper perhaps? I would like to try it out but $100 is a lot if it don't work.

  • @janicelewis2384
    @janicelewis2384 2 роки тому

    I wanted to see how long the copper wire is 🤔

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  2 роки тому

      I tried to unravel it, but it's not possible. The coil is totally molded into clear plastic and when I tried to carefully remove and unwind it, it just broke apart in chunks.

  • @MintOutdoors
    @MintOutdoors 3 роки тому +5

    Doesn't a magnet and a copper coil create electromagnetic energy did you test the grey plastic plate to see if it was magnetic?

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  3 роки тому +3

      No part of the pendant was magnetic in any way. The little gray disk did not stick to a magnet or react to a magnet in any way. Also, a magnet simply being near a coil of wire doesn't create electromagnetic energy. There has to be electricity applied to the coil or there has to be movement of the magnet in relation to the coil, or movement of the coil in relation to the magnet. The pendant has none of these things, so even if the little disk was magnetic it wouldn't do anything. Also, since the coil in this case wasn't connected to anything it would just saturate quickly and nothing would happen, even if there was a magnet and even if that magnet was moving.

    • @MintOutdoors
      @MintOutdoors 3 роки тому +2

      @@bigtb1717 Not in the case of a non-uniform inductive field that can be observed on the surface of the human body.

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  3 роки тому +1

      I'm not sure what you are getting at. You say "not in the case..." What is "not" in that case?

    • @MintOutdoors
      @MintOutdoors 3 роки тому +1

      @@bigtb1717 Neither the magnet or not the coil needs to move in a non-uniform magnetic field to produce an EMF field. Are you a scientist?

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  3 роки тому +1

      Your first comment implied that if there was a magnet inside the pendant it would be creating electromagnetic energy in the coil. That would not happen.
      Now I think you are saying that the magnetic field created by our bodies would be inducing a current into the coil and causing the coil to create an electromagnetic field. Is that what you are saying?
      And no, I am not a scientist.

  • @mattbates6887
    @mattbates6887 Рік тому +1

    It probably works by resonating the body to it's correct bio rhythm frequency, which would otherwise be messed up by exposure to strong EMF fields. Yes strong EMF fields really do mess up the bodies energy field, I have proof of that.

  • @manningchiro
    @manningchiro 6 днів тому

    I have practiced chiropractic Applied Kinesiology for 38.5 years in Massachusetts (since January 1986). Have utilized manual muscle testing every day in practice for that time... challenging mechanical receptor feedback from joints, origins/insertions of muscles, organ and gland reflexes, chemical detox pathways, spinal and axial skeletal motions, etc.,etc., etc. I have accumulated roughly 170,000 individual patient encounters (approximately 8,000 files in my office --with perhaps 200-ish of what I might call "active" files at any one time?)
    My practice is firmly based in physiology, functional anatomy, spinal mechanics and neurology.
    I've muscle tested the Q-Link pendant on at least 100 patients vs. various forms and frequencies of RF radiation.. (microwaves, radio waves, routers, cell phones, laptops...) I can guarantee the reader of this comment that it has consistently abolished the neurological overload and resulting muscle "weakening" (really an inhibition of neural input to the muscle from sensory pathway overload to the brain -- not a true muscle weakness). I can recall literally ONE patient whose weakness to RF field WAS NOT abolished by the Q-Link... not sure why. Quick frame of reference - cell phones can emit 2,500,000 microwatts/square meter at boot up... tested from an inch away. That drops off quickly over about 2-3 feet.
    NOW - I have tested the device's ability to block or absorb RF - with a Safe and Sound Pro II meter. It DOES NOT do either. Nor does the company does not claim that it does, btw. I do not profess to know HOW it works...evidently something to do with coming in harmonic resonance with the person's own frequency (which we certainly do all have). Everything in the universe can be described in terms of vibrations. And it most certainly IS priced far higher than its component parts (but what isn't?). Over almost 4 decades, I've come to implicitly trust the manual muscle testing and challenge techniques at which I've become adept. Based on my testing - I wear one every day.
    At any rate - try it. Or don't try it. I have no skin in the game. Simply wanted to offer some feedback here. The poster of this vid offers a strong opinion that the device is total bunk... his right, of course. I think he couldn't be farther off -- but that's just me. :)

  • @dorongilad8484
    @dorongilad8484 Рік тому

    A good film that inspires self-thinking and questioning.

  • @TheIntellectist
    @TheIntellectist Рік тому

    The central part that you split and comment that it is nothing.
    Could you analyze it with an EMF detector, a geiger meter and a negative ion meter?
    It is to verify that you can have.
    Did you notice if the coil is connected to the central part?

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  Рік тому

      It did nothing to an EMF meter, it was not magnetic and the coil was not connected to the central part in any way. I do not have a geiger counter or ion detector.

    • @TheMentalist783
      @TheMentalist783 Рік тому

      @@bigtb1717 I think you don't know enough. I have tried with an electromagnetic meter and simply with a cable in the form of a coil and it does reduce the radiation. I am curious about this product. the part of the center, did you analyze if it was connected to the coil or check with a microscope if it had some electronic component?

    • @TheMentalist783
      @TheMentalist783 Рік тому

      @@bigtb1717 clearly the coil is connected to the gray central part that you part. What you say is nothing is one of the keys to everything. I propose another challenge, you may be surprised... get an electromagnetic meter and stand in front of a TV approximately 1 meter away at a point where an electromagnetic meter beeps. approximately 100v/m and put the pendant in front you will see how the voltage/meter drops considerably. I'm sure. accept the challenge? Focusing on the fact that it is a scam due to ignorance does not mean that it is so. If you don't want to buy another one for money, do it with a simple cable. Make a coil and see how it reduces radiation. I think the central part could be a shungite paint or some other mineral that absorbs the signal.

    • @TheMentalist783
      @TheMentalist783 Рік тому

      @@bigtb1717 you can check my video, i made a video. It has poor quality, but it is understood that a coil reduces the signal. a magnet too, depending on the material the electromagnetic world is a world.

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  Рік тому

      @@TheMentalist783 Sure, if you hold pretty much any metal in front of one of those EMF detectors it will block some of the signal. That coil will block a bit of the signal and so would pretty much any metal. In fact, your empty hand would block some too. The point is, it doesn't "protect" someone from EMF any more than by blocking a small amount of the EMF that would have hit your body within the tiny surface area of the object itself. Anything that is hitting your body anywhere else will be totally unaffected. And again, when I tested the Q-Link with a detector like that I found that it didn't block any more (and in many cases much less) EMF than my keys, a pocket knife, a handful of change, etc. And unless the Q-Link was directly in front of the sensor, it didn't do anything.

  • @TOCA_no_signal
    @TOCA_no_signal 3 роки тому +1

    What about copper wire? this is the most important part! how many spinning it has and how long is it? would be interesting to know.

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  3 роки тому

      I was unable to unwind it at all. In fact, I couldn't even confirm 100% that it is individual strands that are enameled/insulated, or if it was just bare copper that essentially behaves as one solid chunk of copper rather than a coil.
      Do you have an explanation of what the copper coil is actually doing that makes it "the most important" part?

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  3 роки тому +1

      The only reason I asked why you say the coil is the most important part is because everyone seems to have a different idea of what part is actually the most important, yet nobody can actually point to any reason or mechanism for why they are so sure some characteristic is important.

  • @dylanporras2655
    @dylanporras2655 2 роки тому +2

    Do one on the blushield cube!

  • @OriginNowSound
    @OriginNowSound 3 роки тому

    why didn't you disect the coper wire and go the full extent ? .... thus being able to prove there is no micro chip?
    did you think the chip would be connected to the wire ? obviously not it seems ?

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  3 роки тому +1

      I tried digging the wire apart in an attempt to separate it. I was not able to separate or "unwind" the wire, but I did dig and cut it apart and there is nothing but some copper. No micro-chip or anything.

    • @OriginNowSound
      @OriginNowSound 3 роки тому +2

      Thanks for your reply!
      And for opening up your q link.
      I don't know my self how it is supposed to work. Im sure some people feel a diffrence and some wont lol kind of like you said in the 'studies'. I was given mine as a present and can't quite pin points the exact effects. But wearing it makes me feel better lol 😂
      Even if it is a positve afirmation style placebo at least thats one less negative thought in my head if you get what im saying. :)
      I almost didnt click on your video just incase it made me spoil the placebo but in all honesty it didnt make me feel any negative feelings lol maybe coz im wearing the q link haha! 😂 Anyway lol thanks again for the reply and the courage to open it up to help others see whats inside.
      I have no idea how it is even supposed to work. And have always been suspicious until I put it on haha 😂 so it's hard to say. Maybe the world is more mental than physical.. Who knows!

  • @nhodorek
    @nhodorek 2 роки тому

    I'm still skeptical of the product, but just playing devil's advocate here. If it's a scam like you say it is, how do you explain a 4.7 star rating of 9,675 reviews on Amazon?

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  2 роки тому

      Placebo effect, confirmation bias, etc.
      Throughout history, many "snake-oil" products have managed to gather many glowing reviews. This is nothing new. And like any of those products, the Q-Link is very vague and broad in its list of possible benefits, so anyone who tries one and is looking for some "improvement" will likely be able to find something eventually that they can point to and attribute to the Q-Link.

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  2 роки тому

      Remember, this isn't like a phone case that doesn't fit, a cable that isn't long enough or a tube of glue that doesn't hold. Any potential benefit someone gets from this product is entirely subjective. The company is very careful to keep it that way. They don't make any testable, objective claims. They can't say "everyone who wears this will have reduced joint pain" or something like that, because as soon as someone doesn't get that, they will be like "this didn't work!" But if they keep it vague and subjective, each individual's mind is free to wander and attribute whatever they can imagine to the $100 miracle product they bought. Again, this is how every snake-oil product in history made money and gained positive testimonials.

  • @yeahwhatevermike
    @yeahwhatevermike 3 роки тому +16

    I play electric guitar. Pickups are made from copper windings around another magical thing.
    Magnets. 🤘😆🤘

  • @MrBaimgarbaim
    @MrBaimgarbaim 3 роки тому +4

    ty very much thanks to you my mom wont buy 4 of them (she wouldnt listen to me without you)

  • @krazywabbit
    @krazywabbit 3 роки тому +4

    You just saved me $100. For that, I will subscribe to your channel.

    • @janinawalker4200
      @janinawalker4200 3 роки тому

      Good point and as this was so captivating I listened to the end and subscribers makes his results go higher so I will give him that for the excellent review.

    • @Rezparviz
      @Rezparviz 3 роки тому +1

      Don’t listen to this clown . This thing works , I have one and it works !

    • @krazywabbit
      @krazywabbit 3 роки тому

      @@Rezparviz then send me one for free to test out.

    • @Rezparviz
      @Rezparviz 3 роки тому

      @@krazywabbit what do mean send you one for free . I had to buy mine and nobody gave me one for free . Buy it yourself . But right now you get 50% off your order when you use this coupon code at check out SUMMER21. Anyways I hope you get it and start feeling better .. this changed my life...

    • @mcata3625
      @mcata3625 Рік тому

      ​@@krazywabbit you can order from the company themselves, they have 30 day return policy

  • @roman19802011
    @roman19802011 3 роки тому +5

    Awesome video. Thank you for taking the time to expose this scam.

  • @aonegirlrevolution
    @aonegirlrevolution 5 місяців тому

    I don’t know how I came to your video but I can feel a lot of energy coming off of the thing in your hand. After you separated it from the rest and part was scratched off it was diminished but still there. I don’t know what that thing is.

  • @64Magick
    @64Magick 3 роки тому +2

    *Apparently you don't meditate, it takes AT LEAST a month to a minimum 3 months to distinguish a difference WITHIN....and for the mentally out of tune person, a good 5 months.......but you 110% WILL NOTICE A CHANGE, but U have to wear it everday!!*

  • @aqualane1
    @aqualane1 Рік тому

    I’m just sad I didn’t come up with this idea. Can you imagine how much they’ve made. Damn!

  • @szee8588
    @szee8588 2 роки тому +1

    What about the copper circle? doesn't copper do something?

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  2 роки тому

      Like what? In this application, the copper won't do anything. It's not connected to anything, it is completely isolated and electrically insulated. It's literally just a tiny bit of copper wire. There is copper in my phone (surely more than there is in the Q-Link), plated onto the pennies in my pocket, and alloyed into the keys in my pocket as well. Heck, there is WAY more copper in the cable of the headphones I'm wearing right now.

    • @helenmoon4001
      @helenmoon4001 2 роки тому

      @@bigtb1717 the heartbeat emits frequencies and some electricity that can resonate with the coil

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  2 роки тому +1

      @@helenmoon4001 How? Why would it "resonate" with the coil? How would that help your health in any way? Even if the coil "resonated" (which it wouldn't), how would that somehow do anything to your body? Why would whatever it did to your body necessarily be a good thing?

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  2 роки тому +1

      @@helenmoon4001 Don't get me wrong, I don't mean to sound like a jerk or argumentative. But so many of these vague claims are made about products like this with absolutely nothing to back them up. With the Q-Link, people were telling me they had studies and science that proved it works. I found zero science, just vague claims, similar to yours. The few "studies" I did find were either laughable, or downright dishonest. So forgive me if my default response to claims such as yours tend to be questions.

  • @inogenmackenzie5397
    @inogenmackenzie5397 Місяць тому

    The blood samples show clumped and 'un-clumped' blood cells, an important difference. This is the effect of grounding, as achieved in ancient times via the use of copper (or so I have read). Blood cells that are forming clots are dangerous, so if this pendant can help to create more free-flowing blood, it is worth having.

  • @denisse37921
    @denisse37921 5 місяців тому +1

    Thanks for all the research u did with this video so that we wouldnt have to. Saved me $100!

  • @ritafinta1290
    @ritafinta1290 2 роки тому +8

    I have never watched your videos before, this is the first. I appreciated the scientific approach and detailed research you've done. Thank you for the education, hopefully, people will find your video before they spend all that money on this scam. Or, as you said, if they believe that this product works, it may be worth the money. I suggest finding a (free) lucky stone and putting it in one's pocket (maybe a lucky penny make into a pendant).

  • @patriciadavis7444
    @patriciadavis7444 2 роки тому

    THANKS FOR THE INFORMATION

  • @tydrackarias6886
    @tydrackarias6886 Рік тому +1

    MASSIVELY UNDERRATED CHANNEL AND VIDEO! You have my respects and subscription 💪🏼

  • @crapsterface
    @crapsterface 3 роки тому

    I started playing with energies and frequencies and things, Generally I really dont like the feeling of copper. it definantly is capable of conducting. but plastice is capable of blocking. or blank. thats undetermined lol. resin for orgoneite I feel like it acts as a blocker of the energy. perhaps all that does is bring copper feeling near someone, plastic blocks it from them feeling shitty. but they get a recieveing effect ???? I dunno. talking initial opionin and looking for thoughts. I definantly prefer Silver when it comes to orgone over both gold and copper. perhaps it vibrates for a certain fold, or creates a certain tone , and every individual is different. some is good for, some is bad. I dunoo. thoughts ?

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  3 роки тому

      These are simply my thoughts because you asked for them. I mean no offense.
      A little piece of copper/metal/gold/resin/plastic/etc. isn't doing anything. It isn't channeling any energy or doing anything to your frequencies. It cannot do that.
      Any effect you feel is based on placebo or is simply you attributing normal fluctuations in how you feel to whatever particular thing you are trying at the time. It all sounds like stuff people made up on the spot, trying for a good balance of believable sounding words combined with mystical energy sounding words and just went with it based on nothing.
      Orgonite/orgone energy in particular is ridiculous. It is a modern "snake-oil" product that has co-opted the general terms and a skewed story of the guy who made it in order to sell overpriced paperweights with the totally made up lies about health and energy effects. They guy who invented the term "Orgone" energy and "Orgonite" claimed orgone energy was the energy in the universe that came from perfect orgasms. He didn't create little desktop knick-knacks, he created what he called "Orgonite chambers" that were supposed to absorb this perfect orgasm energy and channel it into the person inside the chamber. He was obsessed with achieving the "perfect" orgasm and finding a way to harness the energy he thought it created. You can only imagine the somewhat scandalous nature of his "research" back in the 1920s-1950s. He fled one country after being investigated as a pimp because of the way his "research facility" was run. Once he came to the US he began building and selling orgonite chambers here. At some point the FDA and FBI started to investigate and eventually a court issued an order for him to explain his products and back up his claims about them. See, he claimed his chambers were treating and curing everything with orgasm energy, so the chambers were deemed to be medical devices. He refused so show in court and continued selling his devices. After he refused to show, the court issued an order for him to stop selling his products until the situation could be sorted out. He refused. He was eventually arrested and convicted of several offenses related to his failure to comply with multiple court orders regarding his business and the marketing of his chambers. He died of a heart attack a short time later. Because his research had something to do with "energy" and he was arrested for something to do with his "research," modern snake-oil salesman have latched on to some of his story, while avoiding the actual details. So suddenly he wasn't a guy who was obsessed with achieving the perfect orgasm and building sex chambers. Instead, he was a guy who simply discovered some amazing energy in the universe and found a way to channel it. Suddenly all you have to do is buy a trippy looking little pyramid and you will be channeling healing "Orgone" energy. It's nothing.

    • @crapsterface
      @crapsterface 3 роки тому

      ok So your out to defuse everything cause u dont believe it. thats fine. I definantly believe there is some snake oil in some of the claims. I was tryi g to see for myself and i made some. had bad results usong it on plants. thru were doing much wprse then the ones left alone. I tried something else. I gathered up 30 woodbugs. 15 in 2 identical jars. base at one end. and the poi t at the other. by morning all the woodbugs at the base end were dead. all the ones on the other end were alive. i felt bad for the bugs. but i was right to question it. it can be just as bad as it can be good. magnet bracelets give me headaches. amd when i say frequencies i mean like radiowaves and such. not people freqs. but they made crystal radios. use crystal in watches. so ot is capable of something. and were u talki g abput wilhelm riche ? i didnt know abput the orgasm thing lol. brings a new light haha

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  3 роки тому

      Yeah, Wilhelm Reich. It's possible that the government was too hard on him for whatever reason (maybe his view towards sex in that day ruffled some feathers) but I don't know all the details of his court case. But his "research" was out there. Towards the end, he was making devices that he claimed directed the orgone energy up towards the sky, instead of to the person inside the chamber. He said this would allow the orgone energy to combat the aliens he claimed were invading Earth.
      I agree that crystal radios, quartz crystal timepieces, etc., work. But there is a difference between incorporating a crystal oscillator into an electrical circuit in order to provide a frequency reference or a timing reference for a control circuit and simply having a crystal or certain material near your body. The crystals in the devices you mention have an electrical current applied to them in order to get them to oscillate. That oscillation is then used by the controls as a reference. When a crystal, piece of copper, etc. is simply placed on or near your body, it doesn't do anything.

    • @crapsterface
      @crapsterface 3 роки тому

      @@bigtb1717 who was that guy who made a chopper blade kind of thing with crystals and minerals and such on it. and you sit underneath it and it spins and it stirs up frequencies in the air or something and it was claimed to cure cancer and other ailments. ? i dont know the guy but i heard of it and seemd similer to wilhems kind of thing. but this guy got burned alive for it. accused of being a satanist in the day

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  3 роки тому

      @@crapsterface Never heard of that one. Literally burned alive? If so, that's awfully harsh.

  • @yazzy1979
    @yazzy1979 Рік тому +2

    To make a video about some thing that you haven’t tried is always interesting not everything is for everybody. I always say if it’s not about you, it’s not for you for some it’s gonna work and for some it’s not

  • @aleister4778
    @aleister4778 2 роки тому

    what about the coil ?

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  2 роки тому +1

      What about it? It's a small coil of thin, copper wire with an enamel coating. So, totally standard magnet wire. It's the kind of stuff used in everything from small relay coils to the windings of tiny motors, inductors and transformers. It's just a roll of thin wire. There are small coils of this type of wire in basically all modern electronics.

    • @dzetta369
      @dzetta369 2 роки тому

      @@bigtb1717 perhaps it rezonante to cellular repeaters frequency.

  • @annevanderlaan6441
    @annevanderlaan6441 7 місяців тому

    I bought one used. Well if it is a placebo I will take it. Because I have horrible tinnitus and if I take it off I have more chatter going on in my ear. So if it is a scam I will keep wearing it.

  • @irene1234
    @irene1234 Рік тому

    Great job and investigation of this fraud. Has anything been done to alert the legitimate researcher whose study Q-Link plagerized? Seems like that would help to put a stop to this scam.

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  Рік тому

      Possibly, which may explain why it was so difficult to find the claimed study at all. Most of the claimed studies are difficult, if not impossible, to find. I checked recently and they still make claims about all these studies on their website, but they still do not link to a single one. At best, they give a volume and page number for the "Journal of Alternative and Complimentary Medicine" where it seems all the "studies" were published. Even searching online for those specific things, I was unable to find the vast majority of them.

    • @halilsmith8162
      @halilsmith8162 5 місяців тому

      I found a very legitimate study here. What do you think about this?
      pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12230903/@@bigtb1717

  • @Dmoriarty1993
    @Dmoriarty1993 2 роки тому +3

    So I bought one of the stainless steel Q links to the tune of £112 and wore it for two days. During this time I didn't notice anything much at all. My sleep certainly didn't improve. Anyway listening to this video has certainly helped as I bought the item based on reviews and fake science. Luckily, I am still well within the returns period so I'll be doing just that. I am prepared to look for a viable option with much more scrutiny. Thank you.

    • @robertprodoehl6817
      @robertprodoehl6817 Рік тому +1

      I don’t think 2 days was enough.😮

    • @standardtuning4guitars423
      @standardtuning4guitars423 Рік тому

      all humans are different. They react differently to certain stimuli. Some people are over-sensitive, some under-sensitive. Theres no point in saying just because you had 1 experience in life that something is fake and trying to shut down anyone with a different opinion. Its like some people find certain music relaxing. if it doesnt effect you the same way fine. Grown up and move on.

  • @yarong27
    @yarong27 3 роки тому

    Nicely done

  • @dbthr33music
    @dbthr33music Рік тому

    UPDATE 2022: What about this study that was done by the BBC? It was with the QLINK SRT-2 and the video is 10 years old. From the lab test blood cells seem to have improved in uniformity. This is what prompted me to buy one. I have the Q-link SRT-2 and i have been wearing it along time. I purchased it after watching the BBC study: ua-cam.com/video/sabahLTZOZ4/v-deo.html

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  Рік тому +1

      That is a story about a supposed study done by a guy calling himself a doctor. The blood study they talk about is the one I talk about in the video. I looked into it for a long time and it wasn't a real study. It's just an article by someone who isn't a real doctor, doesn't have any real credentials and has since been trouble multiple times for practicing medicine without a license and was sued in civil court for selling his blood treatments to cancer patients who ended up dying.
      I know he called what he did a "study," but he simply wrote an article on his website. Few, if any of the details of his methodology or any data involved were given and nothing was ever submitted for peer review, confirmation or replication. It's just claims. Claims by a guy trying to sell his particular blood treatments and books. Claims with absolutely nothing to back them up.

  • @reaper4729
    @reaper4729 2 роки тому

    My mother bought me a dumb hippy necklace that is made of stainless steel and has four holes in it and she's convinced it can stop some waves LOL.

  • @jamesfestini
    @jamesfestini 3 роки тому +6

    I just got one and its a very cool necklace.. People buy costume jewelry all the time. I like the placebo effect.

    • @steelstunners1862
      @steelstunners1862 2 роки тому

      I have some magic beans, wanna buy em?

    • @Dmoriarty1993
      @Dmoriarty1993 2 роки тому +1

      @@steelstunners1862 You bitter he's happy?

    • @steelstunners1862
      @steelstunners1862 2 роки тому

      @@Dmoriarty1993 Stop cryin’ and I’ll let you some magic beans too!

  • @tripleffarms2872
    @tripleffarms2872 2 роки тому

    Y'all try mediation or find out what your triggers are and focus on getting them out of your little circle or whatever I can't be around a bunch of people

  • @llorenzo582
    @llorenzo582 3 роки тому +3

    ...I'm buying that little Leatherman though LOL

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  3 роки тому

      Lol, I love my Leatherman Micra.

  • @OGThunderbird
    @OGThunderbird 2 роки тому +1

    Thanks you just convinced me to buy one you should get kickbacks

  • @SupremeSkeptic
    @SupremeSkeptic 3 роки тому +2

    Some things you could do is use a geiger counter to see if it is emitting radiation and an emf meter to see whether it blocks emf radiation. Because a lot of energy pendant gives off ionizing radiation

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  3 роки тому +3

      Is it supposed to be a good thing that an "energy pendant" gives off ionizing radiation? Either way, lots of everyday stuff gives off small amounts of ionizing radiation. I wouldn't consider a pendant giving off ionizing radiation to be a good thing and it certainly wouldn't be a unique thing either.
      As for blocking EMF, even if it physically blocked a small amount of EMF, wearing it on your body would only block the EMF that would have hit the tiny spot of your body covered by the pendant. Let's be extremely generous and say it blocked 90% of the EMF that hit it. That would mean that it would block 90% of the EMF that would have hit your body in the one particular square inch of your body that the pendant was covering. The entire rest of your body would be receiving the same EMF it was without the pendant.

    • @SupremeSkeptic
      @SupremeSkeptic 3 роки тому +1

      @@bigtb1717 Ionizing radiation is definitely not a good thing. And if you can verify that the pendant actually produces ionizing radiation, then Q-link wouldn't just be a scammer, they also have the intent to physically hurt their consumers.
      I am suggesting the geiger test because a lot of "quantum pendants" also have that blackish coloration exhibited by the epoxy you found inside the Q-link.

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  3 роки тому +2

      Okay, I understand. If I get a chance, I’ll test it.

    • @SupremeSkeptic
      @SupremeSkeptic 3 роки тому

      @@bigtb1717 Thank you, appreciate it :)

  • @benjaminmartin487
    @benjaminmartin487 3 роки тому +1

    I can't believe how stupid I am, i just bought it yesterday, very disappointing. Also i bought the Harmoni pendant that you have to activate it with a rule, maybe another scam? We'll see.

    • @jay_thebaguetteman
      @jay_thebaguetteman 2 роки тому +1

      All of these products are made by unprofessional people (normally they are American companies because they know how to trick people also they actually believe in what they make actually works) but if everyone in the world learned science, probably no one would be tricked by this because all these people make plastic shapes and then say it gets rid of cancer like no it won’t.

  • @jaysuthers435
    @jaysuthers435 6 місяців тому

    I know this video is from a long time ago but that gray thing in the center is probably something called Orgonite. It's finely ground up crystal, mineral, and other organic material that is mixed with epoxy to form this little wafer. It is supposed to protect one from EMFs. So, that gray thing is something. Whether it's beneficial or actually does anything is a mystery.

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  6 місяців тому +1

      I'm going to lean heavily into the "does absolutely nothing" side of things when it comes to "orgonite." Have you ever looked into orgone energy or orgonite and where it started? A lot of people suggested "maybe it's orgonite." Along with a lot of other "maybe this" or "probably that." The company selling Q-Link doesn't say that's what it is, so all anyone can do is speculate. Still, I looked it up. According to the guy who came up with it, "Orgone" was the "energy" that he believed was released from perfect orgasms. The guy invented orgonite "chambers" that were supposed to harness this orgone energy that was...released during an orgasm. He thought his chambers could direct the energy back inward to heal anything or direct it up to the sky to combat the aliens he was convinced were invading Earth. Supposedly. He was run out of multiple countries because his "research centers" were basically brothels.
      Recently, the term orgonite seems to have become associated with some kind of random "energy" or "frequencies" and is attributed to special crystals and/or carbon. The claims are all so vague and varied, it's tough to keep track. It seems most often used to sell little epoxy pyramids with random junk set in it to "block" EMF. I'm thoroughly convinced it's all a bunch of nonsense. Originally, it certainly had nothing to do with EMF or crystals or anything that people currently seem to think about it.

    • @jaysuthers435
      @jaysuthers435 6 місяців тому

      Thanks. I certainly won't defend the sophistry behind these products. I scrolled through some of the comments and didn't see a discussion on Orgonite but it was a light skimming. Someone I know has a cache of these pendants and wanted to know if I was interested in selling them on my website. After reading the literature and watching your video, I declined. I couldn't sell them in good conscience. Thanks for the informative video.

  • @bondjane007
    @bondjane007 Рік тому

    I met a guy today who wears it & says it makes him feel better. he also said he just likes to wear it.He said it comes in many different colors.
    I am guessing it doesn't do anything & probably is a big rip off costing $100.00!!
    It surely isn't worth $100.00 dollars!
    But maybe this guys has bucks & doesn't mind wasting his money on it.
    He also got some stuff he take & says it is making his hair turn black again asa side effect of the stuff he is taking.
    I forgot what it was called, but something like carbon 600???
    Not sure anymore what it was called, but he says he really likes it & it seems to make him feel better.
    & he said it is very very expensive as well..

  • @freeranger1677
    @freeranger1677 Рік тому +1

    It's easier to fool someone than to convince them they've been fooled.

  • @hisway4288
    @hisway4288 Рік тому +1

    I would say try earthing. That has studies shown that it will help and it’s free

  • @MegaTroyhamilton
    @MegaTroyhamilton 3 роки тому

    In weld?

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  3 роки тому +3

      Sorry, I'm not sure what you are asking.

  • @ageoflistening
    @ageoflistening 3 роки тому +3

    The disk is supposed to be a crystal. Thank you. I nearly bought one but its folly to not look inside one.

    • @Leah-ny3tl
      @Leah-ny3tl 3 роки тому +3

      But what kind of crystal. There are several natural crystals/stones that are used for EMF shielding, shungite is the most popular that is used and there are different levels of shungite depending on which one you get or if it is fake. It’s also a conductor for electricity. There is also sodalite, fluorite, hematite (this is also magnetic), smoky quartz, pyrite, lepidolite and tourmaline. Crystals also have the abilities to hold stored information and studies have been done that even water holds memory, Frozen 2 even teaches kids that. Other metals that are used to block emf are COPPER, brass, nickel, silver, steel and tin. So most likely when you buy this product you are buying it for the copper

    • @ageoflistening
      @ageoflistening 3 роки тому +1

      @@Leah-ny3tl exactly... The only element I saw from that video that was any good was the copper. The rest was plastic. To be honest coated copper jewellery people swear by or a copper block or sheet between you and your laptop. I've turned off all my WiFi and use ethernet connectors at home but want something for my phones. Etc etc

    • @Leah-ny3tl
      @Leah-ny3tl 3 роки тому

      @@ageoflistening yea I prolly wouldn’t buy this product when there are so many other options that are more affordable and would prolly work better. I can see why others would buy and use it, that what people choose to spend money on is up to each person but again I use shungite and other rocks/crystals and even plants in my environment and carry with me.

  • @bajo1914
    @bajo1914 2 роки тому

    Hello, I was going to buy one of these just for test but if it is just copper coil I can buy some and put it in 3d printed body.
    Would You mind to share what is the thickness of the copper wire and aprox. length/weight? Thank You.

    • @bigtb1717
      @bigtb1717  2 роки тому +1

      As for length, I tried to unwind the wire, but it is molded into the plastic such that it is essentially all one chunk of copper. I couldn't unwind it, only break off chunks. I also couldn't get it fully out of the plastic, so any weight I could have given would have included some plastic. Unfortunately, I don't think I have the pieces any more.