Guest guest Posted July 26, 2002 Report Share Posted July 26, 2002 Hello. I am in the market for a new juicer. I am willing to spend the $400-$500 for a twin gear juicer, but I'm a confused about all this 'magnet, bio-ceramic far infrared' stuff on the green star. I see Samson makes a twin gear with similar magnet technology. Does anyone know of a twin gear juicer without the magnets, infrared stuff? Does anyone know where I might be able to read up more about this technology? Green Star's web site reads: 'As (the juice) flows through the focused magnetic field,the watermolecules in the juice are broken up allowing the atoms to recombine with other minerals such as calcium, potassium, sodium and magnesium into new molecular structures. This magnetic process therefore extracts a greater % of mineral nutrients from the produce during juice extraction and is instrumental in keeping those minerals in a suspended coloidal form the body can use for a longer length of time.' What???? Should I be concerned about juice that bacteria doesn't want to attack? Is it still juice?? If I decide against the twin gear, what would you recommend as the machine which yields the best quality carrot juice. I wouldn't be opposed to getting two separate juicers: one for carrots, one for wheatgrass. Any suggestions?? Thanks! Scott Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 26, 2002 Report Share Posted July 26, 2002 - " herringscales " <herringscales Friday, July 26, 2002 1:14 PM twin gear juicers.....a question > 'As (the juice) flows through the focused magnetic field,the > watermolecules in the juice are broken up allowing the atoms to > recombine with other minerals such as calcium, potassium, sodium and > magnesium into new molecular structures. This magnetic process > therefore extracts a greater % of mineral nutrients from the produce > during juice extraction and is instrumental in keeping those minerals > in a suspended coloidal form the body can use for a longer length of > time.' A long time ago I knew a grad student who worked at the Synchrotron (atom smasher) at Cornell University. He said the huge magnetic coils were strong enough to line up the polarities in water. With even those huge (many ton) magnets, water molecules were not broken up. So I seriously doubt the juicer mentioned above really does what it claims to do. Not saying it does nothing. I sure don't know that. But as it makes claims which are apparently false, I'd sure look deep before trusting whatever they say. Alobar Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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