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Feedback: Dowsing the night away

Verdicts on fake detectors, solar cleaner is like magic, bring back the Quackometer and more
Feedback: Dowsing the night away
(Image: Paul McDevitt)

Feedback is our weekly column of bizarre stories, implausible advertising claims, confusing instructions and more

Dowsing the night away

BOMB detection is big business, so it’s no surprise that it attracts scams. It does seem to have more than its fair share, whatever “fair share” might mean. First, a recap.

A while ago we reported on tests carried out by the US Naval Explosive Ordnance Disposal Technology Division on the “Sniffex” device (21 May 2011).

The tests were conclusive: as the Sniffex operator was noting “a positive indication” of 20 pounds of explosives in a building, two trucks “containing a total of 1000 pounds of explosive drove up behind him to a distance of approximately 20 feet away. The SNIFFEX failed to show any indication of this much larger quantity of explosives.” The device dressed up in hi-tech black and chrome.

We ended by pointing out that a number of similar devices are still on the market, “but we cannot comment on these due to ongoing legal proceedings.”

East 71st Street in New York City has a number of stop signs. Ronald Diel sends a lovely photo of one of them, beneath which is another sign: “No stopping at any time”

Verdicts on fake detectors

COURTS having reached verdicts, we can report a little more on these “explosive detector” scams. At the beginning of August, Sam and Joan Tree at the Central Criminal Court in London, for selling “bomb detectors” around the world that were little more than a plastic box with an antenna. They made them in their garden shed in Dunstable, Bedfordshire. They sold for up to $2000.

This follows of Gary Bolton, who made up to £3 million a year from similar devices that cost as little as £1.82 to make and sold for as much as £15,000. He was sentenced to seven years, and his business partner Jim McCormick was given 10 years in May 2013.

The , which campaigns to have such frauds investigated, believes the charges against Bolton and McCormick should have included manslaughter, given reports that police officers have died while using the pair’s “magic wands”.

We would welcome news of any more such devices, even if we cannot report them immediately, as well as suggestions as to why this is such a scam-prone field.

Solar cleaner is like magic!

ANOTHER area that attracts scepticism is energy efficiency. Feedback is sure of the existence of conscientious double-glazing salespeople who negate the slanderous stereotype. But some solar-panel vendors have a little to learn about maintaining a reputation.

Nick McNamara points us to SolarKing UK why, even though the photovoltaic panels are “self-cleaning”, you should still pay for annual cleaning using a “specialist Pure Water System”.

What’s that, then? “It’s like magic!” the site says. It lists four filters that normal tap water goes through on the way to becoming Pure, finishing with: “DI Filter – Polishes the soft water to zero part per million so that the resulting solution has more positive charges than negative charges.”

Feedback can agree that this is “like magic”. Also, we offer to make the copywriter in question disappear.

Bring back the Quackometer

PERHAPS those who engage such copywriters could club together to mend the and check their output. This useful gadget will sieve a website for you and award it up to 10 “canards” for, well, the quackishness of its content (1 May 2010). Sadly, when we tried it recently it didn’t work.

The person behind it, Andy Lewis, has had some success as a blogger. In July he noted at that , Conservative MP for Bosworth and a member of UK parliamentary committees on science and technology and health, is .

Quackometry in Parliament

FEEDBACK wondered, in the interests of objective quackometry, whether any of David Tredinnick’s fellow MPs and Lords subscribe to his unusual views. Our first finding was that we should organise a whip-round to restore the “advanced search” facility on the website, which once upon a time we used to use to find out precisely who had said what, where and when.

Apart from the , the few dozen mentions we can imprecisely find have, happily, the same flavour as , Labour member for Wirral South: “I remind Members of the comments of the American economist J. K. Galbraith: ‘The function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectable’.”

Little astrology in Congress

THE United States Congress, meanwhile, has a wonderfully precise . It reveals of astrology this session, in a written statement honouring a bookshop owner. Is Congress avoiding or scorning the subject?

Do not be distracted by this

FINALLY, having drifted into the field of government, we offer a public statement from the state’s enforcers. Adrian Cull sends a photo of a poster in the window of a bank on Chiswick High Road in London.

The Metropolitan Police helpfully warn: “Do not be distracted whilst using this cash machine. Distraction thieves may be operating in this area.” Adrian notes that he wasn’t distracted until he saw that…

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