I got one of these on amazon to help treat my lyme disease joint pain. First thing. This sauna gets hot! I'm not sure what temperature it goes up to but I'm a 33 year old male in decent health and I have to open the zipper every 10 mins just to regulate the heat so I dont pass out lol. There is no thermostat on this unit. It's either on or off. So I just open and close the zipper to regulate the heat a bit. The construction feels decent but I would avoid being too rough with the zippers. I'd say at under $200 it's a solid deal. When I bought mine it was selling for 150. Overall it has been helping kill my lyme disease. Using heat for extended periods is a method used to help kill lyme disease bacteria and I can definitely feel the improvement with this unit. There are places that do this type of therapy in mexico and in germany but it is not approved in usa where I live. So the next alternative if for lyme disease patients to take matters into their own hands.
How does the steam compare to infrared? I had a infrared that I wouldn’t get into below 115 and soaked at 130 ish. This was great for my arthritis but now don’t have the space for the wood structure. My concern is that the heat penetration won’t be as good at only 110f .
@@Goldib04 that is a great question . My grandparents would run a steam sauna without water into heat in the 180 ish range. To hot for humans killing everything. In this plastic room I would hit it with spray bleach, maybe bleach in the steam water to sanitize? Interesting what they say.
Very smart to put towel under chair. Just purchased and had my first session. I'm very satisfied.
Great to hear!
I got one of these on amazon to help treat my lyme disease joint pain. First thing. This sauna gets hot! I'm not sure what temperature it goes up to but I'm a 33 year old male in decent health and I have to open the zipper every 10 mins just to regulate the heat so I dont pass out lol. There is no thermostat on this unit. It's either on or off. So I just open and close the zipper to regulate the heat a bit. The construction feels decent but I would avoid being too rough with the zippers. I'd say at under $200 it's a solid deal. When I bought mine it was selling for 150. Overall it has been helping kill my lyme disease. Using heat for extended periods is a method used to help kill lyme disease bacteria and I can definitely feel the improvement with this unit. There are places that do this type of therapy in mexico and in germany but it is not approved in usa where I live. So the next alternative if for lyme disease patients to take matters into their own hands.
so glad you're seeing positive results!
However I didn't see how much water u need to add.
I’m shopping for portable sauna. Would you recommend the dura sage or the infrared serenelife for a beginner looking for quality product?
This is so GREAT! Thank YOU!
good video !! thanks mister
Can you do a video on how to clean it when you are done
How does the steam compare to infrared? I had a infrared that I wouldn’t get into below 115 and soaked at 130 ish. This was great for my arthritis but now don’t have the space for the wood structure. My concern is that the heat penetration won’t be as good at only 110f .
Infrared typically penetrates deeper there is this amzn.to/3zyGVdl thats a portable infrared but I would get something that goes over 130deg ideally
How to you clean the sauna to avoid bacteria build up?
@@Goldib04 that is a great question . My grandparents would run a steam sauna without water into heat in the 180 ish range. To hot for humans killing everything. In this plastic room I would hit it with spray bleach, maybe bleach in the steam water to sanitize? Interesting what they say.
@@richardmccombs617 Thanks you
How much water do u add for 20-30 minutes.
Does it come with the streamer ?
I’m about to start using this! How long do you normally sit in it
start out with what you can handle!
Is that pvc
How much the sauna for home
Plzzzz reply my question
How much