Determining Your Lowest-Voltage Quadrant

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What Is A Negative Voltage

A negative voltage simply means that the ratio of electrons to holes is higher than at a selected reference point. The reference point is usually "the other side of the battery", or in electronics, often-but-not-always, "ground"; In the mouth, the other side of the filling. Therefore, the other reference point—ground if you will—is usually taken at the jaw that the tooth is attached to, which is considered "the other side of the filling" (battery).

Most people have most of their fillings generate a negative voltage on the top surface in reference to the bottom surface. This means there are more electrons-to-holes (ratio) on the top surface than on the bottom. Many people, myself included, had a mixture of negative and positive voltages, but most were negative.

Taking A Voltage Reading

Using An Analog Meter

If you take a voltage reading by placing the positive lead (usually red) on the top-filling surface and the "ground" lead (usually black) to the jaw, and if you're using an analog meter, then if the needle moves to the right, you have a positive voltage on the filling. If the needle moves to the left, you have a negative voltage on the filling.

If the needle moves to the left, that is, in the negative direction and if your analog meter is not equipped to read in the negative direction, you need to reverse the leads to get the actual voltage reading. Now, because the leads are reversed, you are actually reading the voltage in the negative direction, so what you're reading is actually a negative voltage.

Using A Digital Meter

Now, if you're using a digital meter, they can read positive or negative voltages without reversing the leads, so it will display the actual voltage and will display a minus sign in front of the voltage reading if it is actually a negative value.

Determing The "Most-Negative" Quadrant

When you're talking about removing the quadrant with the "most negative" sum of voltages, you would first add up all the voltages for each quadrant and then remove the fillings from the quadrant with the "lowest" number. This same rule applies no matter what polarity (negative or positive) your fillings were.

Examples

Here are some examples to demonstrate:

Example #1

  • Quadrant 1: +120 uv (microvolts)
  • Quadrant 2: +100 uv
  • Quadrant 3: +256 uv
  • Quadrant 4: +18 uv

Quadrant 4 has the "most negative" sum.

Example #2

  • Quadrant 1: -67 uv (microvolts)
  • Quadrant 2: +18 uv
  • Quadrant 3: -8 uv
  • Quadrant 4: +12 uv

Quadrant 1 has the "most negative" sum.

Example #3

  • Quadrant 1: -120 uv (microvolts)
  • Quadrant 2: -100 uv
  • Quadrant 3: -256 uv
  • Quadrant 4: -18 uv

Quadrant 3 has the "most negative" sum.


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Disclaimer: We are not a doctors. We do not prescribe medication or practice medicine. No information we share is intended to prescribe medication or practice medicine, nor is it intended to prevent, treat or cure symptoms, conditions or diseases. We only express our opinions based on personal research and experience.

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