Tiny Device Protects Cell Phone Users from Microwave Radiation
It's an electronic circuit no larger than a thimble weighing less than 1/10 of an once, but one day it may save your life. For fifteen years, the communications industry has defended the safety of portable telephone devices against independent researcher's claims of health hazards.
In just a few weeks, a new invention will be patent pending, hoping to end the debate by seeking the Good Housekeeping Institute's seal of approval by proving that it stops 100% of the microwave radiation.
This new generation radiation shield called a ZAR Shield, which is a acronym for Zero Absorption Rate, contains a circuit which absorbs and deflects the energy radiated from a cellular phone's antenna. The absorbed radiation is converted into a wall of magnetic energy which deflects the microwave radiation and magnetic fields emitted by the cell phone.
The ZAR Shield stops 100% of the microwave radiation from a cell phone's antenna from entering the user's brain by reshaping the magnetic field away from the antenna. All without effecting the operation of the phone.
The developer, Woodward Applied Research of Dunn Loring, Virginia, plans to begin manufacture of their device, as soon as funding has been resolved. They claim that the market is subject to scams pointing out a recent Good House-keeping Institute report which disclosed that all of the radiation shields they tested did not work, having no effect on the amount of radiation that was absorbed into the user's brains.
The inventor of the ZAR Shield also developed the device used in the U.S. Army's Medi-Tag project (an electronic dog tag) and co-invented the data logging device for the U.S. Navy's Towed Sonar Array System. With modifications this electronic circuit may also be applied to the areas of energy control and distribution.
Released by:
Woodward Applied Research,Inc.
8005 Matt Court
Dunn Loring, Virginia 22027-1007
703-560-7150
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