Well, honestly, that’s actually a very reasonable price for a product like this that actually works, that involved a huge amount of development resources. Just consider the time they spent developing the product. They had dozens of people working on it for a year and have not made one cent on it yet. I think the price tag of $1000 is likely as low as they could go. I have been consistently suggesting they charge an absolute minimum and make their profit through long-term delivery of a high-value product that people like, use, and recommend to others.
Micro-pulse products only cost so little because I just did all of the technical, engineering, scientific, design, manufacturing, and testing work by myself. Most products require dozens of people and massive resources. This is my hobby (I have a day job), I don’t need to make a living off of it. So its probably not fair or accurate to compare the price of micro-pulse products with any other well-designed PEMF product. They simply would need to cost much more than micro-pulse products.




