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#1
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I have occasional conversations with a woman who has moved house three
times because of radio waves entering her brain at each location and making her ill. She has metallic mesh over all the windows. Her latest house had a redundant VHF FM aerial with no downlead which she spotted and decided was the reason she felt ill whenever she went near the TV set. The FM aerial was removed and the symptoms she felt were greatly reduced. She has bought a variety of RF meters (mostly from the USA) which give 'confusing' results. Last year her dog developed a small cancerous lump which was, she felt sure, caused by the cellphone tower that she could see from the bedroom window. Today I made a discovery that I think will help her and other sufferers. In Range I found a roll of aluminium cooking foil. It was 75m long by 450mm wide, and was the thick stuff that is quite strong. The price was £6.79, which is 9p per metre. It was labelled 'catering quality'. At home I discovered that this product is exactly the same as a product branded 'Bacofoil, which is sold in 6.5m rolls ('5m plus 1.5m 'free'') at £2.49. That's 38p per metre. When I say 'exactly the same' the two products are made in the same factory and have the same reference number on the little tag that keeps the roll from unrolling. The thickness appears to be exactly the same. The only difference is, the Bacofoil branded roll has a faint criss-cross pattern embossed on it. How this makes it a better product I don't know. The woman who rings me from time to time will be delighted with this news, since she uses a massive amount of cooking foil, not least to wrap around her head and line her bra. The dog's basket apparently also looks very swish with its silver paper covering. Bill |
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#2
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Bill Wright scribbled...
I have occasional conversations with a woman who has moved house three times because of radio waves entering her brain at each location and making her ill. She has metallic mesh over all the windows. Her latest house had a redundant VHF FM aerial with no downlead which she spotted and decided was the reason she felt ill whenever she went near the TV set. The FM aerial was removed and the symptoms she felt were greatly reduced. She has bought a variety of RF meters (mostly from the USA) which give 'confusing' results. Last year her dog developed a small cancerous lump which was, she felt sure, caused by the cellphone tower that she could see from the bedroom window. Today I made a discovery that I think will help her and other sufferers. In Range I found a roll of aluminium cooking foil. It was 75m long by 450mm wide, and was the thick stuff that is quite strong. The price was £6.79, which is 9p per metre. It was labelled 'catering quality'. At home I discovered that this product is exactly the same as a product branded 'Bacofoil, which is sold in 6.5m rolls ('5m plus 1.5m 'free'') at £2.49. That's 38p per metre. When I say 'exactly the same' the two products are made in the same factory and have the same reference number on the little tag that keeps the roll from unrolling. The thickness appears to be exactly the same. The only difference is, the Bacofoil branded roll has a faint criss-cross pattern embossed on it. How this makes it a better product I don't know. The woman who rings me from time to time will be delighted with this news, since she uses a massive amount of cooking foil, not least to wrap around her head and line her bra. The dog's basket apparently also looks very swish with its silver paper covering. Bill Another failure of Care in the Community. At least she's apparently rich enough to be ****ing nutcase. Okay, so where do we get this cheap foil from ? |
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#3
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On 22/01/2014 07:04, Artic wrote:
Bill Wright scribbled... I have occasional conversations with a woman who has moved house three times because of radio waves entering her brain at each location and making her ill. She has metallic mesh over all the windows. Her latest house had a redundant VHF FM aerial with no downlead which she spotted and decided was the reason she felt ill whenever she went near the TV set. The FM aerial was removed and the symptoms she felt were greatly reduced. She has bought a variety of RF meters (mostly from the USA) which give 'confusing' results. Last year her dog developed a small cancerous lump which was, she felt sure, caused by the cellphone tower that she could see from the bedroom window. Today I made a discovery that I think will help her and other sufferers. In Range I found a roll of aluminium cooking foil. It was 75m long by 450mm wide, and was the thick stuff that is quite strong. The price was £6.79, which is 9p per metre. It was labelled 'catering quality'. At home I discovered that this product is exactly the same as a product branded 'Bacofoil, which is sold in 6.5m rolls ('5m plus 1.5m 'free'') at £2.49. That's 38p per metre. When I say 'exactly the same' the two products are made in the same factory and have the same reference number on the little tag that keeps the roll from unrolling. The thickness appears to be exactly the same. The only difference is, the Bacofoil branded roll has a faint criss-cross pattern embossed on it. How this makes it a better product I don't know. The woman who rings me from time to time will be delighted with this news, since she uses a massive amount of cooking foil, not least to wrap around her head and line her bra. The dog's basket apparently also looks very swish with its silver paper covering. Bill Another failure of Care in the Community. At least she's apparently rich enough to be ****ing nutcase. Okay, so where do we get this cheap foil from ? "Range". http://www.therange.co.uk/ -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk |
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#4
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On Wed, 22 Jan 2014 07:04:42 -0000, Artic wrote:
In Range I found a roll of aluminium cooking foil. It was 75m long by 450mm wide, and was the thick stuff that is quite strong. The price was £6.79, which is 9p per metre. 33.75 sq m or 20.1p/sq m At home I discovered that this product is exactly the same as a product branded 'Bacofoil, which is sold in 6.5m rolls ('5m plus 1.5m 'free'') at £2.49. That's 38p per metre. 2.925 sq m or 85p/sq m Okay, so where do we get this cheap foil from ? CostCo? 21 Jun '11 Foil 200m x 30cm £11.46 inc VAT 60 sq m or 19.1p/sq m (but note the date) Cling film is also cheap: 9 Jul '12 Cling Film 400m x 34.5cm £3.69 inc VAT These are "catering quality" and both are heavier duty than normal supermarket foil and film. -- Cheers Dave. |
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#5
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"Artic" wrote in message
dhosting.com... Bill Wright scribbled... I have occasional conversations with a woman who has moved house three times because of radio waves entering her brain at each location and making her ill. She has metallic mesh over all the windows. Her latest house had a redundant VHF FM aerial with no downlead which she spotted and decided was the reason she felt ill whenever she went near the TV set. The FM aerial was removed and the symptoms she felt were greatly reduced. She has bought a variety of RF meters (mostly from the USA) which give 'confusing' results. Last year her dog developed a small cancerous lump which was, she felt sure, caused by the cellphone tower that she could see from the bedroom window. Today I made a discovery that I think will help her and other sufferers. In Range I found a roll of aluminium cooking foil. It was 75m long by 450mm wide, and was the thick stuff that is quite strong. The price was £6.79, which is 9p per metre. It was labelled 'catering quality'. At home I discovered that this product is exactly the same as a product branded 'Bacofoil, which is sold in 6.5m rolls ('5m plus 1.5m 'free'') at £2.49. That's 38p per metre. When I say 'exactly the same' the two products are made in the same factory and have the same reference number on the little tag that keeps the roll from unrolling. The thickness appears to be exactly the same. The only difference is, the Bacofoil branded roll has a faint criss-cross pattern embossed on it. How this makes it a better product I don't know. The woman who rings me from time to time will be delighted with this news, since she uses a massive amount of cooking foil, not least to wrap around her head and line her bra. The dog's basket apparently also looks very swish with its silver paper covering. Bill Another failure of Care in the Community. At least she's apparently rich enough to be ****ing nutcase. Okay, so where do we get this cheap foil from ? Looks like Russ Andrews has missed a trick here then? -- Woody harrogate three at ntlworld dot com |
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#6
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In article , Bill Wright
scribeth thus I have occasional conversations with a woman who has moved house three times because of radio waves entering her brain at each location and making her ill. She has metallic mesh over all the windows. Her latest house had a redundant VHF FM aerial with no downlead which she spotted and decided was the reason she felt ill whenever she went near the TV set. The FM aerial was removed and the symptoms she felt were greatly reduced. She has bought a variety of RF meters (mostly from the USA) which give 'confusing' results. Last year her dog developed a small cancerous lump which was, she felt sure, caused by the cellphone tower that she could see from the bedroom window. Today I made a discovery that I think will help her and other sufferers. In Range I found a roll of aluminium cooking foil. It was 75m long by 450mm wide, and was the thick stuff that is quite strong. The price was £6.79, which is 9p per metre. It was labelled 'catering quality'. At home I discovered that this product is exactly the same as a product branded 'Bacofoil, which is sold in 6.5m rolls ('5m plus 1.5m 'free'') at £2.49. That's 38p per metre. When I say 'exactly the same' the two products are made in the same factory and have the same reference number on the little tag that keeps the roll from unrolling. The thickness appears to be exactly the same. The only difference is, the Bacofoil branded roll has a faint criss-cross pattern embossed on it. How this makes it a better product I don't know. The woman who rings me from time to time will be delighted with this news, since she uses a massive amount of cooking foil, not least to wrap around her head and line her bra. The dog's basket apparently also looks very swish with its silver paper covering. Bill Look at it as a "sales opportunity" to the desperate like Russ Andrews does.. Buy these in and sell them to her at a 200% mark-up ...http://www.bioprotectivesystems.com/products/ -- Tony Sayer |
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#7
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Hmm, wellits much the same for IPA. If you buy it for tape path cleaning
nowadays, its very expensive in little plastic bottles, but if you buy a big can from cpc, its very much cheaper. I suppose I should comment about this persons radio wave issue, but really its hard to be sure if she is completely hat stand or just misguided. Have you explained the inverse su quare law to her? Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active "Bill Wright" wrote in message ... I have occasional conversations with a woman who has moved house three times because of radio waves entering her brain at each location and making her ill. She has metallic mesh over all the windows. Her latest house had a redundant VHF FM aerial with no downlead which she spotted and decided was the reason she felt ill whenever she went near the TV set. The FM aerial was removed and the symptoms she felt were greatly reduced. She has bought a variety of RF meters (mostly from the USA) which give 'confusing' results. Last year her dog developed a small cancerous lump which was, she felt sure, caused by the cellphone tower that she could see from the bedroom window. Today I made a discovery that I think will help her and other sufferers. In Range I found a roll of aluminium cooking foil. It was 75m long by 450mm wide, and was the thick stuff that is quite strong. The price was £6.79, which is 9p per metre. It was labelled 'catering quality'. At home I discovered that this product is exactly the same as a product branded 'Bacofoil, which is sold in 6.5m rolls ('5m plus 1.5m 'free'') at £2.49. That's 38p per metre. When I say 'exactly the same' the two products are made in the same factory and have the same reference number on the little tag that keeps the roll from unrolling. The thickness appears to be exactly the same. The only difference is, the Bacofoil branded roll has a faint criss-cross pattern embossed on it. How this makes it a better product I don't know. The woman who rings me from time to time will be delighted with this news, since she uses a massive amount of cooking foil, not least to wrap around her head and line her bra. The dog's basket apparently also looks very swish with its silver paper covering. Bill |
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#8
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Artic wrote:
Okay, so where do we get this cheap foil from ? The Range Bill |
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#9
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Brian Gaff wrote:
Have you explained the inverse su quare law to her? I've explained it several times. I've explained it in the context a cellphone base 200m away versus a cellphone clamped to one's lughole. Also in other contexts. It's a waste of time. There's no comprehension whatsoever, plus an element of, "You might say that but... "...many things are unknown to science." "...I have to go on my own experience, not on theory." "... etc." Yet she's not stupid. It's as if the parts of her brain concerned with logical deduction and evidence are missing." Bill |
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#10
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On 22/01/2014 14:54, Bill Wright wrote:
Brian Gaff wrote: Have you explained the inverse su quare law to her? I've explained it several times. I've explained it in the context a cellphone base 200m away versus a cellphone clamped to one's lughole. Also in other contexts. It's a waste of time. There's no comprehension whatsoever, plus an element of, "You might say that but... "...many things are unknown to science." "...I have to go on my own experience, not on theory." "... etc." Yet she's not stupid. It's as if the parts of her brain concerned with logical deduction and evidence are missing." Tongue in cheek Maybe we should introduce her to Harry, then. They'd have a lot in common. -- Tciao for Now! John. |
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